NICER monitoring of supersoft X-ray sources
M. Orio, K. Gendreau, M. Giese, J.G.M. Luna, J. Magdolen, S. Pei, B., Sun, E. Behar, A. Dobrotka, J. Mikolajewska, D.R. Pasham, T.E. Strohmayer

TL;DR
This study used NICER to monitor supersoft X-ray sources, revealing persistent pulsations and surface phenomena of white dwarfs, with implications for understanding their magnetic and thermal properties.
Contribution
It provides new long-term observational data on supersoft sources, identifying pulsation behaviors and surface temperature complexities of white dwarfs in these systems.
Findings
Persistent sources showed unvaried flux after decades.
Pulsations suggest proximity to the white dwarf surface.
V1674 Her's pulsation period likely due to magnetic rotation.
Abstract
We monitored four supersoft sources - two persistent ones, CAL 83 and MR Vel, and the recent novae YZ Ret (Nova Ret 2020) and V1674 Her (Nova Her 2021) - with NICER. The two persistent SSS were observed with unvaried X-ray flux level and spectrum, respectively, 13 and 20 years after the last observations. Short period modulations of the supersoft X-ray source (SSS) appear where the spectrum of the luminous central source was fully visibl (in CAL 83 and V1674 Her) and were absent in YZ Ret and MR Vel, in which the flux originated in photoionized or shocked plasma, while the white dwarf (WD) was not observable. We thus suggest that the pulsations occur on, or very close to, the WD surface. The pulsations of CAL 83 were almost unvaried after 15 years, including an irregular drift of the 67 s period by 2.1 s. Simulations, including previous XMM-Newton data, indicate actual…
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