The Symbiotic Recurrent Nova V745 Sco at Radio Wavelengths
Isabella Molina, Laura Chomiuk, Justin D. Linford, Elias Aydi, Amy J., Mioduszewski, Koji Mukai, Kirill V. Sokolovsky, Jay Strader, Peter Craig,, Dillon Dong, Chelsea E. Harris, Miriam M. Nyamai, Michael P. Rupen, Jennifer, L. Sokoloski, Frederick M. Walter, Jennifer H.S. Weston

TL;DR
This study analyzes radio observations of the recurrent nova V745 Sco, revealing that shock breakout from dense circumstellar material explains its radio light curves, providing insights into the nova's environment and particle acceleration.
Contribution
It introduces a model of shock breakout from dense CSM to explain radio light curves, challenging simple spherical models and offering new understanding of nova environments.
Findings
Radio light curves peak around 20 days post-eruption.
Shock breakout occurs from dense CSM, not simple wind interaction.
Efficient particle acceleration with epsilon_e and epsilon_B around 0.01-0.1.
Abstract
V745 Sco is a Galactic symbiotic recurrent nova with nova eruptions in 1937, 1989 and 2014. We study the behavior of V745 Sco at radio wavelengths (0.6-37,GHz), covering both its 1989 and 2014 eruptions and informed by optical, X-ray, and -ray data. The radio light curves are synchrotron-dominated. Surprisingly, compared to expectations for synchrotron emission from explosive transients such as radio supernovae, the light curves spanning 0.6-37 GHz all peak around the same time (18-26 days after eruption) and with similar flux densities (5-9 mJy).We model the synchrotron light curves as interaction of the nova ejecta with the red giant wind, but find that simple spherically symmetric models with wind-like circumstellar material (CSM) cannot explain the radio light curve. Instead, we conclude that the shock suddenly breaks out of a dense CSM absorbing screen around 20 days…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astro and Planetary Science · Nuclear Physics and Applications
