Studies of novae at GMRT frequencies

N. G. Kantharia
National Centre for Radio Astrophysics, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Post Bag 3, Ganeshkhind, Pune 411 007

Abstract. Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) which operates at wavelengths longer than 20 cm (frequencies ≤ 1.4 GHz) has been used to search for radio emission from Galactic novae systems since 2002. Of the 11 Galactic novae observed with GMRT, radio continuum emission has been detected in two of the systems whereas atomic gas associated with two systems has been imaged and studied in the 21 cm signal of Hi. The two novae studied in the radio continuum with the GMRT are the remnant of GK Persei, a classical nova which had an outburst in 1901 and RS Ophiuchi, a recurrent nova following its last outburst in 2006. Combining the GMRT data on the classical nova GK Persei with VLA data at earlier epochs resulted in concluding that the nova remnant was undergoing a secular decrease in its flux density and in its adiabatic phase of evolution \citep{2005A&A...435..167A}. RS Ophiuchi was observed at 1280, 610, 325 and 240 MHz with the GMRT days after its outburst and detected at all the observed frequencies. The near-simultaneous monitoring of its flux density at the low GMRT frequencies, resulted in the study of its spectral index which was indicative of synchrotron emission at all epochs \citep{2007ApJ...667L.171K}. A supernova model resulted in a reasonable fit to the observed light curves; in particular the late appearance of emission at the lower GMRT frequencies due to the foreground clumpy, ionized, thermal circumbinary material. Comparison of these results with the previous outburst indicated that the densities of this clumpy medium had reduced making it optically thin to GMRT frequencies in 2006 \citep{2007ApJ...667L.171K}. It is important to complement the higher radio frequency studies with observations at GMRT frequencies since these study different regions and physics of the nova system. Studies at GMRT frequencies can result in insights on the shock physics, distribution and density of the circumbinary material or planetary nebula, magnetic field generation and the spectral index evolution. Since the evolution of a nova system is faster than a supernova and novae are more numerous; these can be studied over shorter timescales. A sensitivity limit of 1 mJy can detect radio emission at GMRT frequencies upto a distance of 10 kpc, if the non-thermal luminosity of the novae system is 1013 W Hz-1. Out of the total of about 33 novae detected in the radio bands, 9 have shown the presence of non-thermal emission in their spectra and 4 of these are recurrent in nature. GMRT frequencies are ideal to observe the non-thermal emission from the recurrent nova population as the ejecta expands driving shocks into the dense circumbinary material from the giant companion. An important motivation for studying the non-thermal radio emission from recurrent novae is to interrogate any evolutionary connection to the lack of detectable radio emission from type 1a supernova systems which recurrent novae are believed to evolve into and subsequently lend support to this model.

Keywords: (stars:) novae, cataclysmic variables -- (stars:) white dwarfs -- radio continuum: stars

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