Nova V2362 Cygni has undergone a number of very unusual changes. Ground-based spectroscopy initially revealed a normal sequence of events: the object faded and its near-infrared emission lines gradually shifted to higher excitation conditions until about day 100 when the optical fading reversed and the object slowly brightened. This was accompanied by a rise in the Swift X-ray telescope flux and a sudden shift in excitation of the visible and IR spectrum back to low levels. The new lower excitation spectrum revealed broad line widths and many P-Cygni profiles, all indicative of the ejection of a second shell. Eventually, dust formed, the X-ray brightness - apparently unaffected by dust formation - peaked and then declined, and the object faded at all wavelengths. The Spitzer dust spectra revealed a number of solid-state emission features that, at this time, are not identified. © 2008. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Lynch, D. K., Woodward, C. E., Gehrz, R., Helton, L. A., Rudy, R. J., Russell, R. W., … Shore, S. N. (2008). Nova V2362 Cygni (Nova Cygni 2006): Spitzer, swift, and ground-based spectral evolution. Astronomical Journal, 136(5), 1815–1827. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/136/5/1815
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