Gamma-ray emission from individual classical novae |
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Authors: | Jordi Gó mez-Gomar,Margarita Hernanz,Jordi José ,& Jordi Isern |
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Affiliation: | Institut d'Estudis Espacials de Catalunya, CSIC Research Unit, Edifici Nexus-201, C/Gran Capità, 2-4, E-08034 Barcelona, Spain,;Departament de Física i Enginyeria Nuclear (UPC), Avda. Víctor Balaguer, s/n, E-08800 Vilanova i la Geltrú(Barcelona), Spain |
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Abstract: | Classical novae are important producers of radioactive nuclei, such as 7Be, 13N, 18F, 22Na and 26Al. The disintegration of these nuclei produces positrons (except for 7Be) that through annihilation with electrons produce photons of energies 511 keV and below. Furthermore, 7Be and 22Na decay producing photons with energies of 478 and 1275 keV, respectively, well in the γ-ray domain. Therefore, novae are potential sources of γ-ray emission. We have developed two codes in order to analyse carefully the γ-ray emission of individual classical novae: a hydrodynamical one, which follows both the accretion and the explosion stages, and a Monte Carlo one, able to treat both production and transfer of γ-ray photons. Both codes have been coupled in order to simulate realistic explosions. The properties of γ-ray spectra and γ-ray light curves (for the continuum and for the lines at 511, 478 and 1275 keV) have been analysed, with a special emphasis on the difference between carbon–oxygen and oxygen–neon novae. Predictions of detectability of individual novae by the future SPI spectrometer on board the INTEGRAL satellite are made. Concerning 26Al, its decay produces photons of 1809 keV but this occurs on a time-scale much longer than the typical time interval between nova outbursts in the Galaxy, making it undetectable in individual novae. The accumulated emission of 26Al from many Galactic novae has not been modelled in this paper. |
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Keywords: | nuclear reactions, nucleosynthesis, abundances stars: abundances novae, cataclysmic variables white dwarfs gamma-rays: theory. |
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