The Role of Type Ia Supernovae in Chemical Evolution I: Lifetime of Type Ia Supernovae and Galactic Supernova Rates
Chiaki Kobayashi, Ken'ichi Nomoto

TL;DR
This paper presents a new model for Type Ia Supernovae based on the single degenerate scenario, accounting for metallicity effects, which successfully explains observed supernova rates, delay times, and chemical evolution across different galaxy types and redshifts.
Contribution
The model incorporates metallicity dependence and binary evolution effects, providing improved predictions of SN Ia rates and chemical signatures compared to previous models.
Findings
SN Ia lifetime distribution peaks at ~0.1 and 1 Gyr.
Reproduces observed SN Ia rates in various galaxy types.
Predicts a decline in SN Ia rate at z>1.
Abstract
We construct a new model of Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia), based on the single degenerate scenario, taking account of the metallicity dependences of the white dwarf (WD) wind and the mass-stripping effect on the binary companion star. Our model naturally predicts that the SN Ia lifetime distribution spans a range of 0.1-20 Gyr with the double peaks at ~0.1 and 1 Gyr. While the present SN Ia rate in elliptical galaxies can be reproduced with the old population of the red-giants+WD systems, the large SN Ia rate in radio galaxies could be explained with the young population of the main-sequence+WD systems. Because of the metallicity effect, i.e., because of the lack of winds from WDs in the binary systems, the SN Ia rate in the systems with [Fe/H]<-1, e.g., high-z spiral galaxies, is supposed to be very small. Our SN Ia model can give better reproduction of the [(alpha, Mn, Zn)/Fe]-[Fe/H]…
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