The photometric evolution of M 31-RV has been investigated on 1447 plates of the Andromeda galaxy obtained over half a century with the Asiago telescopes. M 31-RV is a gigantic stellar explosion that occurred during 1988 in the Bulge of M 31 and that was characterized by the appearance for a few months of an M supergiant reaching . The 1988 outburst has been positively detected on Asiago plates, and it has been the only such event recorded over the period covered by the plates (1942-1993). In particular, an alleged previous outburst in 1967 is excluded by the more numerous and deeper Asiago plates, with relevant implication for the interpretative models of this unique event. We outline a close analogy in spectral and photometric evolution with those of V838 Mon which exploded in our Galaxy in 2002. The analogy is found to extend also to the closely similar absolute magnitude at the time of the sudden drop in photospheric temperature that both M 31-RV and V838 Mon exhibited. These similarities, in spite of the greatly differing metallicity, age and mass of the two objects, suggest that the same, universal and not yet identified process was at work in both cases.


M31-RV evolution and its alleged multi-outburst pattern

BOSCHI, Federico;
2004-01-01

Abstract

The photometric evolution of M 31-RV has been investigated on 1447 plates of the Andromeda galaxy obtained over half a century with the Asiago telescopes. M 31-RV is a gigantic stellar explosion that occurred during 1988 in the Bulge of M 31 and that was characterized by the appearance for a few months of an M supergiant reaching . The 1988 outburst has been positively detected on Asiago plates, and it has been the only such event recorded over the period covered by the plates (1942-1993). In particular, an alleged previous outburst in 1967 is excluded by the more numerous and deeper Asiago plates, with relevant implication for the interpretative models of this unique event. We outline a close analogy in spectral and photometric evolution with those of V838 Mon which exploded in our Galaxy in 2002. The analogy is found to extend also to the closely similar absolute magnitude at the time of the sudden drop in photospheric temperature that both M 31-RV and V838 Mon exhibited. These similarities, in spite of the greatly differing metallicity, age and mass of the two objects, suggest that the same, universal and not yet identified process was at work in both cases.

2004
stars: AGB and post-AGB / stars: novae, cataclysmic variables / stars: peculiar / stars: individual: V838 Mon / stars: individual: M 31-RV / galaxies: individual: M 31
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11562/321585
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