On the fraction of intermediate-mass close binaries that explode as type-Ia supernovae
Dan Maoz

TL;DR
This paper estimates the fraction of intermediate-mass stars that become Type-Ia supernovae, finding a higher rate than theoretical models predict, suggesting possible revisions in understanding binary evolution or supernova origins.
Contribution
It compiles and compares multiple observational methods to estimate the SN-Ia progenitor fraction, revealing a higher rate than current theories suggest.
Findings
Estimated SN-Ia progenitor fraction: 2-40%.
Nearly every intermediate-mass close binary may produce a SN-Ia.
Discrepancy between observed fractions and theoretical predictions.
Abstract
Type-Ia supernovae (SNe-Ia) are thought to result from a thermonuclear runaway in white dwarfs (WDs) that approach the Chandrasekhar limit, either through accretion from a companion or a merger with another WD. I compile observational estimates of the fraction eta of intermediate-mass stars that eventually explode as SNe-Ia, supplement them with several new estimates, and compare them self-consistently. The estimates are based on five different methods, each utilising some observable related to the SN-Ia rate, combined with assumptions regarding the IMF: the ratio of SN-Ia to core-collapse rates in star-forming galaxies; the SN-Ia rate per unit star-formation rate; the SN-Ia rate per unit stellar mass; the iron to stellar mass ratio in galaxy clusters; and the abundance ratios in galaxy clusters. The five methods indicate that a fraction in the range eta~2-40% of all stars with initial…
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