NSV 11749, a small-town variable star living in a lonely world, was nearing the end of its life. The red giant was shedding its outer layers and shrinking into a stellar corpse. But just as it was about to cross over, the star emitted a brilliant flash and was seemingly reborn, blossoming once again into a fleshed-out red giant. The latest twist shows that NSV 11749 had everybody fooled. The star faked its shocking transformation with help from a hidden partner. Read more
Title: NSV 11749: Symbiotic Nova, Not a Born-Again Red Giant Authors: Howard E. Bond, Mansi M. Kasliwal
NSV 11749 is a little-studied variable star, discovered by W. J. Luyten, which had a long-duration outburst around the year 1903, reaching blue magnitude 12.5 at maximum. Following the outburst, it has apparently been quiescent at about blue magnitude 17 for the past century. It was recently suggested that NSV 11749 may have been a low- or intermediate-mass star that underwent a final helium shell flash, making it temporarily a "born-again" red giant. If so, it would be only the fourth known member of this class, along with V605 Aql, FG Sge, and V4334 Sgr. However, our newly obtained optical and near-IR spectra of the object show that it is instead a symbiotic binary, with strong Balmer and He I-II emission lines, combined with a cool red-giant companion of spectral type M1-2 III. The 1903 outburst was most likely a symbiotic nova event, of which less than a dozen are known at present.
Title: NSV 11749, an elder sibling of the born again stars V605 Aql and V4334 Sgr? Authors: M. M. Miller Bertolami, R. D. Rohrmann, A. Granada, L. G. Althaus
We argue that NSV 11749, an eruption observed in the early twentieth century, was a rare event known as "very late thermal pulse" (VLTP). To support our argument we compare the lightcurve of NSV 11749 with those of the two bonafide VLTP objects known to date, V4334 Sgr and V605 Aql, and with those predicted by state of the art stellar evolution models. Next, we explore the IPHAS and 2MASS catalogues for possible counterparts of the eruption. Our analysis shows that the VLTP scenario outperforms all other proposed scenarios as an explanation of NSV 11749. We identify an IPHAS/2MASS source at the eruption location of NSV 11749. The derived colours suggest that the object is not enshrouded in a thick dust shell as V605 Aql and V4334 Sgr. Also the absence of an apparent planetary nebula (PN) at the eruption location suggests differences with known VLTP objects which might be linked to the intensity of the eruption and the mass of the object. Further exploration of this source and scenario seems desirable. If NSV 11749 was a born again star, it would be the third event of its kind to have been observed and will strongly help us to increase our understanding on the later stages of stellar evolution and violent reactive convective burning.