Novae in γ-rays
M. Hernanz

Institut de Ciencies de l'Espai, ICE (CSIC-IEEC), Campus UAB, Facultat de Ciencies-C5-parell-2a planta, E-08193 Bellaterra (Barcelona), Spain

Abstract. Classical novae produce radioactive nuclei which are emitters of γ-rays in the MeV range. Some examples are the lines at 478 and 1275 keV (from 7Be and 22Na and the positron-electron annihilation emission (511 keV line and a continuum below this energy, with a cut-off at 20-30 keV). The analysis of γ-ray spectra and light curves is potentially a unique and powerful tool both to trace the corresponding isotopes and to give insights on the properties of the expanding envelope determining its transparency. Another possible origin of γ-rays is the acceleration of particles up to very high energies, so that either neutral pions or inverse Compton processes produce γ-rays of energies larger than 100 MeV. MeV photons during nova explosions have not been detected yet, although several attempts have been made in the last decades; on the other hand, GeV photons from novae have been detected in some particular novae, in symbiotic binaries, where the companion is a red giant with a wind, instead of a main sequence star as in the cataclysmic variables hosting classical novae. Both mechanisms of γ-ray production in novae are reviewed, with more emphasis on the one related to radioactivities.

Keywords: stars: novae, cataclysmic variables -- white dwarfs -- gamma-rays: observations -- instrumentation: miscellaneous

Download Full Paper

Back to Home Page