New NuSTAR observation and historical review indicate an initial strong shock near the red giant in RS Oph produces both gamma-ray particle acceleration and 0.2-30 keV thermal X-rays, with gamma-ray flux from Fermi inconsistent and implications for T CrB.
Aydi, et al., Direct evidence for shock-powered optical emission in a nova, Nature Astron
3 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
citation-role summary
citation-polarity summary
fields
astro-ph.HE 3verdicts
UNVERDICTED 3roles
background 2representative citing papers
A toy model of reverse shocks in novae predicts GeV gamma rays near optical peak and potential TeV emission later, consistent with Fermi observations under an empirically thin post-shock layer.
Reviews IceCube neutrino results, models Galactic plane flux from cosmic ray interactions with the interstellar medium, and discusses prospects for identifying PeVatrons via LHAASO sources.
citing papers explorer
-
The powerful shocks in RS Oph: NuSTAR X-ray data and a complete review
New NuSTAR observation and historical review indicate an initial strong shock near the red giant in RS Oph produces both gamma-ray particle acceleration and 0.2-30 keV thermal X-rays, with gamma-ray flux from Fermi inconsistent and implications for T CrB.
-
A Unified Model for Shock Interaction and $\gamma$-Ray Emission in Classical Novae
A toy model of reverse shocks in novae predicts GeV gamma rays near optical peak and potential TeV emission later, consistent with Fermi observations under an empirically thin post-shock layer.
-
IceCube Results and Perspective for Neutrinos from LHAASO Sources
Reviews IceCube neutrino results, models Galactic plane flux from cosmic ray interactions with the interstellar medium, and discusses prospects for identifying PeVatrons via LHAASO sources.