Flares, wind and nebulae: the 2015 December mini-outburst of V404 Cygni
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters Oxford University Press (OUP) (2016) slw222
Gamma-ray Novae: Rare or Nearby?
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 465 (2016) 1218-1226
Abstract:
Classical Novae were revealed as a surprise source of γ-rays in Fermi LAT observations. During the first 8 years since the LAT was launched, 6 novae in total have been detected to >5σ in γ-rays, in contrast to the 69 discovered optically in the same period. We attempt to resolve this discrepancy by assuming all novae are γ-ray emitters, and assigning peak one-day fluxes based on a flat distribution of the known emitters to a simulated population. To determine optical parameters, the spatial distribution and magnitudes of bulge and disc novae in M31 are scaled to the Milky Way, which we approximate as a disc with a 20 kpc20 kpc radius and elliptical bulge with semi major axis 3 kpc3 kpc and axis ratios 2:1 in the xy plane. We approximate Galactic reddening using a double exponential disc with vertical and radial scale heights of rd=5 kpcrd=5 kpc and zd=0.2 kpczd=0.2 kpc, and demonstrate that even such a rudimentary model can easily reproduce the observed fraction of γ-ray novae, implying that these apparently rare sources are in fact nearby and not intrinsically rare. We conclude that classical novae with mR ≤ 12 and within ≈8 kpc≈8 kpc are likely to be discovered in γ-rays using the Fermi LAT.Flares, wind and nebulae: the 2015 December mini-outburst of V404 Cygni
(2016)
EVIDENCE FOR SIMULTANEOUS JETS AND DISK WINDS IN LUMINOUS LOW-MASS X-RAY BINARIES
The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 830:1 (2016) l5