WY Sagittae, also known as Nova Sagittae 1783, is a star in the constellation
Sagitta which had a
nova eruption visible in 1783. It was discovered on 26 July 1783 by the French astronomer
Joseph Lepaute D'Agelet. It is usually difficult to precisely identify novae that were discovered hundreds of years ago, because the positions were often vaguely reported (for example the discoverer may have only reported the constellation where the nova occurred) and historically there was not a clear distinction drawn between different sorts of transient astronomical events such as novae and comet apparitions.[5] However D'Agelet observed this nova with a
mural quadrant, which produced coordinates accurate enough to allow modern astronomers to identify the star.[6] D'Agelet reported the
apparent magnitude of the star as 6, but
Benjamin Apthorp Gould, who analysed D'Agelet's records, determined that what D'Agelet called magnitude 6 corresponds to magnitude 5.4 ± 0.4 on the modern magnitude scale,[7] so the nova was visible to the naked eye.
A near-infrared (
K band) light curve for WY Sagittae, adapted from Somers et al. (1996).[8] The
ordinate is linear in flux.
Very little is known about WY Sagittae's post-eruption
light curve. D'Agelet reported the star's magnitude as 6, 6 and 6.7 on the 26th, 27th and 29 July 1783, respectively. At least a half dozen observers attempted to find D'Agelet's nova in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, without success.[6] In 1942 a photographic search for the nova was performed using the
60-inch telescope on Mt. Wilson, and in 1950 Harold Weaver tentatively identified a faint blue star with a
photographic magnitude of 18.9 as the quiescent nova. The star was only a few arc seconds away from D'Agelet's reported position, and fluctuations in its brightness added to the confidence that it was indeed the nova.[6] In 1971
Brian Warner observed Weaver's candidate for WY Sagittae with the
Otto Struve Telescope, and saw rapid brightness variations that are ubiquitous in quiescent novae, which confirmed Weaver's identification of D'Agelet's nova.[9]
All novae are binary stars, with a "donor" star orbiting a
white dwarf. The two stars are so close together that matter is transferred from the donor star to the white dwarf. Because the distance between the stars is comparable to the radius of the donor star, novae are often
eclipsing binaries, and WY Sagittae does show eclipses.
The eclipses, which are quite deep (two magnitudes), show that the binary's orbital period is 3 hours and 41 minutes.[10][11] Christian Knigge classified the donor star's
spectral type as M4±1.[12] Somers et al. estimate the donor star's spectral type to be between M3.5 and M4.5, and the mass of the white dwarf to lie between 0.5
M☉ and 1.1 M☉.[13]
Özdönmez et al. estimate WY Sagittae's distance to be 4200±400 parsecs, based on
reddening.[3]
WY Sagittae is sometimes listed as the second oldest "recovered" nova (meaning a historical nova for which modern observations have unambiguously identified the post-nova star), with only
CK Vulpeculae being older.[14] But
Naylor et al. argue that CK Vulpeculae is not a nova, and WY Sagittae is the oldest recovered nova.[15]
References
^
abWebbink, R.F.; Hazen, M.L.; Hoffleit, D. (July 2002). "Coordinates and Identifications of Harvard Variables". Information Bulletin on Variable Stars. 5298: 1.
Bibcode:
2002IBVS.5298....1W.