J. Krautter et al., ROSAT X-RAY OBSERVATIONS OF NOVA V1974 CYGNI - THE RISE AND FALL OF THE BRIGHTEST SUPERSOFT X-RAY SOURCE, The Astrophysical journal, 456(2), 1996, pp. 788-797
The classical nova V1974 Cygni (1992) was observed by ROSAT on a total
of 18 occasions from 1992 April 22 until 1993 December 3. All observa
tions were carried out with the PSPC. Over the observation interval, t
he count rate rose from 0.03 +/- 0.01 counts s(-1) to a peak of 76.5 /- 0.17 counts s(-1) in summer 1993 and then rapidly declined to a val
ue of 0.22 +/- 0.01 counts s(-1) on the last observation. Its brightne
ss during the summer of 1993 made it the brightest supersoft source ev
er observed in X-rays. The initial observations showed only a hard com
ponent with a peak around 1 keV. Subsequently, during the X-ray rise,
a much softer component appeared that dominated the emitted energy at
maximum. It is also this soft component that decayed most rapidly. In
the same time interval, it declined by a factor of 350 while the harde
r component declined by about a factor of 10. The hard component is mo
st likely a signature of the mass loss in the system caused by the int
eraction between the expanding envelope and density inhomogeneities in
the diffuse ejecta. The soft component showed all the characteristics
of a supersoft source. In fact, V1974 Cyg could also serve as a parad
igm for supersoft sources in general. From blackbody model fits to the
measured spectral energy distribution of V1974 Cyg, it is abundantly
clear that simple X-ray fits do not give adequate results and that spe
ctral fit parameters obtained from blackbody fits to the supersoft X-r
ays sources are unreliable and should be used with care. We explain th
e supersoft component, in terms of the thermonuclear runaway model of
the nova outburst, as the signature of the energy emitted by hydrostat
ic hydrogen burning on the surface of the white dwarf remnant. Our dat
a are best explained by the soft X-rays source being present from near
the beginning of the outburst. The initial rise in soft X-rays is, th
erefore, caused by the clearing of the ejected nebula as it expanded a
nd its density decreased. In this model, the X-ray turnoff is caused b
y the cessation of nuclear burning on the white dwarf as the accreted
hydrogen is exhausted 18 months after the beginning of the outburst. W
e used the timescale for the decrease in the X-rays to estimate a mass
of similar to 10(-5) M. for the hydrogen-exhausted, remnant envelope
on the white dwarf.