Molecular remnant of Nova 1670 (CK Vulpeculae): I. Properties and enigmatic origin of the gas
T. Kaminski, K. M. Menten, R. Tylenda, K.T. Wong, A. Belloche, A., Mehner, M. R. Schmidt, N.A. Patel

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA and SMA observations to analyze the molecular composition, morphology, and physical conditions of the remnant of Nova CK Vulpeculae, revealing complex chemistry and shock involvement, and constraining the nature of its central object.
Contribution
First detailed interferometric survey of CK Vul's molecular remnant, providing insights into its composition, morphology, physical conditions, and implications for its origin and central star.
Findings
Rich molecular composition with over 180 transitions observed.
Temperatures of 14-17 K and densities of 10^4-10^6 cm^-3 derived.
Evidence suggests shock involvement and constraints on the central star's nature.
Abstract
CK Vul erupted in 1670 and is considered a stellar-merger candidate. Its remnant contains a molecular component of surprisingly rich composition. We present interferometric line surveys with subarcsec resolution with ALMA and SMA. The observations provide interferometric maps of molecular line emission at frequencies between 88 and 243 GHz that allow imaging spectroscopy of more than 180 transitions of 26 species. We present, classify, and analyze the different morphologies of the emission regions displayed by the molecules. We also perform a non-LTE radiative-transfer analysis of emission of most of the observed species, deriving temperatures and column densities in five parts of the nebula. Non-LTE effects are clearly seen in complex species including methanol absorption against the CMB. The temperatures are 17 K in the inner remnant and 14 K in the extended lobes. We find total…
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