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Post Info TOPIC: AG Pegasi


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Posts: 131433
Date:
HD 207757
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Title: New outburst of the symbiotic nova AG Peg after 165 years
Author: A. Skopal, S. Yu. Shugarov, M. Sekerá, M. Wolf, T. N. Tarasova, F. Teyssier, M. Fujii, J. Guarro, O. Garde, K. Graham, T. Lester, V. Bouttard, T. Lemoult, U. Sollecchia, J. Montier, D. Boyd

AG Peg is known as the slowest symbiotic nova, which experienced its nova-like outburst around 1850. After 165 years, during June of 2015, it erupted again showing characteristics of the Z And-type outburst. The primary objective is to determine basic characteristics, the nature and type of the 2015 outburst of AG Peg. We achieved this aim by modelling the spectral energy distribution using low-resolution spectroscopy (330-750 nm), medium-resolution spectroscopy (420-720 nm; R=11000), and UBVRCIC photometry covering the 2015 outburst with a high cadence. Optical observations were complemented with the archival HST and FUSE spectra from the preceding quiescence. During the outburst, the luminosity of the hot component was in the range of 2-11 x 10^37(d/0.8kpc)˛ erg/s. To generate the maximum luminosity the white dwarf (WD) had to accrete at ~3 x 10^-7 solar masses yr^-1, which exceeds the stable-burning limit and thus led to blowing optically thick wind from the WD. We determined its mass-loss rate to a few x 10^-6 solar masses yr^-1. At the high temperature of the ionising source, 1.5 - 2.3 x 10^5 K, the wind converted a fraction of the WD's photospheric radiation into the nebular emission that dominated the optical. A one order of magnitude increase of the emission measure, from a few x 10^59(d/0.8kpc)˛ cm^-3 during quiescence, to a few x 10^60(d/0.8kpc)˛ cm^-3 during the outburst, caused a 2 mag brightening in the LC, which is classified as the Z And-type of the outburst. The very high nebular emission and the presence of a disk-like HI region encompassing the WD, as indicated by a significant broadening and high flux of the Raman-scattered OVI 6825 \AA\ line during the outburst, is consistent with the ionisation structure of hot components in symbiotic stars during active phases.

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Posts: 131433
Date:
AG Pegasi
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AG Pegasi is a symbiotic binary star in the constellation Pegasus. It is a close binary composed of a red giant and white dwarf, estimated to be around 2.5 and 0.6 times the mass of the Sun respectively.
Initially a magnitude 9 star, AG Pegasi brightened and peaked at an apparent magnitude of 6.0 around 1885 before gradually fading to magnitude 9 in the late 20th century.

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Right ascension 21h 51m 01.97413s Declination +12° 37' 32.1218"



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