Type Ia supernovae from chemically segregated white dwarfs
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
EDP Sciences
Materia
Nuclear reactions Nucleosynthesis Abundances – supernovae: general – white dwarfs
Fecha
2024-03-22Referencia bibliográfica
E. Bravo, J. Isern and L. Piersanti. Type Ia supernovae from chemically segregated white dwarfs. A&A, 683 (2024) A237 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202348187
Patrocinador
Spanish grant PID2021-123110NB-100 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/FEDER/UE; MICIN/AEI grant PID2019-108709GBI00; Program Unidad de Excelencia Maria de Maetzu CEX2020-001058-M; Italian MUR project2022RJLWHN: Understanding R-process & Kilonovae Aspects (URKA)Resumen
Type Ia supernovae are the outcome of the explosion of a carbon–oxygen white dwarf in a close binary system. They are thought to be
the main contributors to the galactic nucleosynthesis of iron-peak elements, with important contributions to the yields of intermediatemass
elements. Recent analyses of the phase diagram of carbon and oxygen containing impurities such as 22Ne and 56Fe in conditions
relevant to white dwarf interiors suggest that both isotopes can partially separate when the temperature of the star is low enough to start
solidifying. The purpose of the present paper is to examine the impact of this separation on the yields of the different chemical species
synthesized during explosions. We used a one-dimensional supernova code to evaluate the impact of the sedimentation assuming
different degrees of chemical separation. We find that the main properties of the ejecta, the kinetic energy, and the ejected mass of
56Ni only vary slightly when the separation is taken into account. However, the yields of important isotopes that are used as diagnostic
tools, such as manganese, can be strongly modified. Furthermore, the chemical separation studied here is able to change several
indicators related to the metallicity of the progenitor (such as the mass ratio of calcium to sulphur in the ejecta or the UV flux of the
supernova) and to its mass, whether it is a Chandrasekhar-mass white dwarf or a substantially lighter one (such as the imprint of stable
nickel on late-time infrared spectra or that related to the presence of radioactive nickel at the center of the ejecta).





