Introducing the Condor Array Telescope: III. The expansion and age of the shell of the dwarf nova Z Camelopardalis, and detection of a second, larger shell
Michael M. Shara, Kenneth M. Lanzetta, James T. Garland, Stefan, Gromoll, David Valls-Gabaud, Frederick M. Walter, John F. Webb, David R., Zurek, Noah Brosch, R. Michael Rich

TL;DR
This study uses the Condor Array Telescope to analyze the nova shell of Z Camelopardalis, revealing a second, larger shell and providing insights into the nova's eruption history and shell expansion rates over 15 years.
Contribution
First observational detection of a second, larger shell around Z Cam and extended the shell's expansion measurement to 15 years, supporting theories of nova shell evolution.
Findings
Detected a second, larger shell around Z Cam
Measured the shell's expansion velocity as 83 ± 37 km/s
Estimated the shell's age at approximately 2672 years
Abstract
The existence of a vast nova shell surrounding the prototypical dwarf nova Z Camelopardalis (Z Cam) proves that some old novae undergo metamorphosis to appear as dwarf novae thousands of years after a nova eruption. The expansion rates of ancient nova shells offer a way to constrain both the time between nova eruptions and the time for post-nova mass transfer rates to decrease significantly, simultaneously testing nova thermonuclear runaway models and hibernation theory. Previous limits on the expansion rate of part of the Z Cam shell constrain the inter-eruption time between Z Cam nova events to be 1300 years. Deeper narrow-band imaging of the ejecta of Z Cam with the Condor Array Telescope now reveals very low surface brightness areas of the remainder of the shell. A second, even fainter shell is also detected, concentric with and nearly three times the size of the "inner" shell.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Laser-Plasma Interactions and Diagnostics
