The 2019 outburst of the 2005 classical nova V1047 Cen: a record breaking dwarf nova outburst or a new phenomenon?
E. Aydi, K. V. Sokolovsky, J. S. Bright, E. Tremou, M. M. Nyamai, A., Evans, J. Strader, L. Chomiuk, G. Myers, F-J. Hambsch, K. L. Page, D. A. H., Buckley, C. E. Woodward, F. M. Walter, P. Mr\'oz, P. J. Vallely, T. R., Geballe, D. P. K. Banerjee, R. D. Gehrz, R. P. Fender

TL;DR
The 2019 outburst of V1047 Cen was unusually long and energetic, exhibiting features that suggest a new, possibly exotic phenomenon beyond typical dwarf novae or classical novae, involving enhanced mass transfer and nuclear shell burning.
Contribution
This study documents a unique, prolonged outburst in a cataclysmic variable, proposing a new astrophysical phenomenon involving enhanced mass transfer and shell burning.
Findings
Outburst lasted over 400 days with 6 magnitudes amplitude.
Spectral features indicated high-velocity outflows and energetic emission.
The event differs from classical novae and dwarf novae, suggesting a new phenomenon.
Abstract
We present a detailed study of the 2019 outburst of the cataclysmic variable V1047~Cen, which hosted a classical nova eruption in 2005. The peculiar outburst occurred 14 years after the classical nova event and lasted for more than 400 days, reaching an amplitude of around 6 magnitudes in the optical. Early spectral follow-up revealed what could be a dwarf nova (accretion disk instability) outburst. However, the outburst duration, high velocity (2000\,km\,s) features in the optical line profiles, luminous optical emission, and presence of prominent long-lasting radio emission together suggest a phenomenon more exotic and energetic than a dwarf nova outburst. The outburst amplitude, radiated energy, and spectral evolution are also not consistent with a classical nova eruption. There are similarities between V1047~Cen's 2019 outburst and those of classical symbiotic stars, but…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
