The first orbital period of a very bright and fast Nova in M31: M31N 2013-01b
Martino Marelli, Domitilla De Martino, Sandro Mereghetti, Andrea De, Luca, Ruben Salvaterra, Lara Sidoli, Gianluca Israel, Guillermo Rodriguez

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed multi-wavelength observation of a very bright, fast nova in M31, including its first orbital period measurement, revealing insights into its white dwarf and companion star.
Contribution
First detection of the orbital period of a nova in M31, along with comprehensive X-ray, UV, and optical data analysis of a very bright, fast nova.
Findings
Nova reached R~15 mag and decayed rapidly within 3 days.
First detection of the Super-Soft X-ray phase in this nova.
Orbital period of 1.28 hours identified, below the typical period gap.
Abstract
We present the first X-ray and UV/optical observations of a very bright and fast nova in the disc of M31, M31N 2013-01b. The nova reached a peak magnitude 15 mag and decayed by 2 magnitudes in only 3 days, making it one of the brightest and fastest novae ever detected in Andromeda. From archival multi-band data we have been able to trace its fast evolution down to mag in less than two weeks and to uncover for the first time the Super-Soft X-ray phase, whose onset occurred 10-30 days from the optical maximum. The X-ray spectrum is consistent with a blackbody with a temperature of 50 eV and emitting radius of 4 cm, larger than a white dwarf radius, indicating an expanded region. Its peak X-ray luminosity, 3.5 erg s, locates M31N 2013-01b among the most luminous novae in M31. We also unambiguously detect a short 1.280.02…
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