ApJ 953 160 (2023) The understanding of novae, the thermonuclear eruptions on the surfaces of
white dwarf stars in binaries, has recently undergone a major paradigm shift.
Though the bolometric luminosity of novae was long thought to arise directly
from photons supplied by the thermonuclear runaway, recent GeV gamma-ray
observations have supported the notion that a significant portion of the
luminosity could come from radiative shocks. More recently, observations of
novae have lent evidence that these shocks are acceleration sites for hadrons
for at least some types of novae. In this scenario, a flux of neutrinos may
accompany the observed gamma rays. As the gamma rays from most novae have only
been observed up to a few GeV, novae have previously not been considered as
targets for neutrino telescopes, which are most sensitive at and above TeV
energies. Here, we present the first search for neutrinos from novae with
energies between a few GeV and 10 TeV using IceCube-DeepCore, a densely
instrumented region of the IceCube Neutrino Observatory with a reduced energy
threshold. We search both for a correlation between gamma-ray and neutrino
emission as well as between optical and neutrino emission from novae. We find
no evidence for neutrino emission from the novae considered in this analysis
and set upper limits for all gamma-ray detected novae.