A Possible Nova from the IRAS Point Source Catalogue

Garcia-Lario, P.; Manchado, A.; Sahu, K. C.; Pottasch, S. R.
Bibliographical reference

Physics of Classical Novae. Proceedings of Colloquium No.122 of the International Astronomical Union, held in Madrid, Spain, on June 27-30, 1989. Editors, A. Cassatella, R. Viotti; Publisher, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Germany; New York, NY, 1990. ISBN # 3-540-53500-4. LC # QB841 .I55 P. 55, 1990

Advertised on:
1990
Number of authors
4
IAC number of authors
0
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
During a spectroscopic survey of IRAS sources with infrared colours similar to those in planetary nebulae, IRAS 06518-1041 revealed itself as a possible novalike object. The spectrum of IRAS 06518 - 1041, which is shown in Figure 1, presents strong and broad hydrogen Balmer lines together with broad permitted lines of He and C. This spectrum also shows a much weaker narrow nebular component, with forbidden lines of [OIII] and narrow Ha. The mean velocity associated to the observed line widths is about 800 km s-1. The observed emission lines correspond well to typical post-novae objects in the quiescent phase (Warner, 1989). Another argument which supports the idea of this object being a nova-like star is that there are some indications of the binarity of the source if we attend to the asymmetries observed both in the H and H profiles. The high resolution spectrum at H shows the presence of a sharp double-peaked central emission from a low expanding envelope at a velocity of 35±5 km s-1, together with a much broader emission with velocities of several hundred kilometers. The displacement between both components is about 130 km s-1. This broad component could be due to the presence of an accretion disk around the system with hydrogen-rich material falling onto the compact companion. This is supported by the fact that the broad emission looks like the combination of different velocity components giving rise to a complex and asymmetric line profile. From this high resolution spectrum we derive a VLSR=57 km s-1, which points to a distance of 5.5 kpc if we adopt the model rotation curve of the Galaxy given by Pottasch (1984) and a distance of 9 kpc from the Sun to the galactic center. The large infrared excess detected by the IRAS satellite is probably the result of the formation of dust grains in the outer parts of the common envelope at a temperature of about 160 K, as can be derived from the infrared data. This infrared excess is also present in other nova-like objects and is specially important in old and slow novae (Callus et al, 1987) where the continuous ejection of mass produces dust shells which are strong emitters in the infrared.