Carbon Detonation and Shock-Triggered Helium Burning in Neutron Star Superbursts
Nevin N. Weinberg (UC Berkeley), Lars Bildsten (KITP, UCSB)

TL;DR
This paper models the hydrodynamic detonation during neutron star superbursts, revealing how shock waves trigger helium burning and produce observable precursors, with implications for understanding superburst ignition and composition.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed model of detonation-driven superbursts, showing shock-triggered helium burning and linking detonation products to observed heat flux enhancements.
Findings
Detonation propagates through deep fuel layers, driving shock waves.
Shock triggers unstable helium burning in the outer layers.
Detonation products include silicon, sulfur, and argon, affecting crust composition.
Abstract
The strong degeneracy of the 12C ignition layer on an accreting neutron star results in a hydrodynamic thermonuclear runaway, in which the nuclear heating time becomes shorter than the local dynamical time. We model the resulting combustion wave during these superbursts as an upward propagating detonation. We solve the reactive fluid flow and show that the detonation propagates through the deepest layers of fuel and drives a shock wave that steepens as it travels upward into lower density material. The shock is sufficiently strong upon reaching the freshly accreted H/He layer that it triggers unstable 4He burning if the superburst occurs during the latter half of the regular Type I bursting cycle; this is likely the origin of the bright Type I precursor bursts observed at the onset of superbursts. The cooling of the outermost shock-heated layers produces a bright, ~0.1s, flash that…
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