English

M31N 2007-11d: A Slowly-Rising, Luminous Nova in M31

Astrophysics 2008-12-18 v1

Abstract

We report a series of extensive photometric and spectroscopic observations of the luminous M31 nova M31N 2007-11d. Our photometric observations coupled with previous measurements show that the nova took at least four days to reach peak brightness at R~14.9 on 20 Nov 2007 UT. After reaching maximum, the time for the nova to decline 2 and 3 magnitudes from maximum light (t_2 and t_3) was ~9.5 and ~13 days, respectively, establishing that M31N 2007-11d was a moderately fast declining nova. During the nova's evolution a total of three spectra were obtained. The first spectrum was obtained one day after maximum light (5 days post-discovery), followed by two additional spectra taken on the decline at two and three weeks post-maximum. The initial spectrum reveals narrow Balmer and Fe II emission with P Cygni profiles superimposed on a blue continuum. These data along with the spectra obtained on the subsequent decline clearly establish that M31N 2007-11d belongs to the Fe II spectroscopic class. The properties of M31N 2007-11d are discussed within the context of other luminous novae in M31, the Galaxy, and the LMC. Overall, M31N 2007-11d appears to be remarkably similar to Nova LMC 1991, which was another bright, slowly-rising, Fe II nova. A comparison of the available data for luminous extragalactic novae suggest that the >~4 day rise to maximum light seen in M31N 2007-11d may not be unusual, and that the rise times of luminous Galactic novae, usually assumed to be <~2 days, may have been underestimated.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0809.1388,
  title  = {M31N 2007-11d: A Slowly-Rising, Luminous Nova in M31},
  author = {A. W. Shafter and A. Rau and R. M. Quimby and M. M. Kasliwal and M. F. Bode and M. J. Darnley and K. A. Misselt},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.1388},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal (28 pages, 6 figures)

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