The Effect of Composition on Nova Ignitions
Ken J. Shen, Lars Bildsten

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the composition of accreted material on white dwarfs influences nova ignition mechanisms, affecting the nova rate and observable pre-outburst signals, with implications for upcoming astronomical surveys.
Contribution
It identifies new triggering mechanisms for nova ignition based on accreted composition, particularly the roles of carbon and helium isotopes, and predicts observable effects.
Findings
Carbon depletion occurs at high accretion rates for low carbon fractions.
Convection can be triggered by 3He+3He reactions for certain helium abundances.
Pre-outburst brightening is predicted due to 3He burning, detectable in quiescent phases.
Abstract
The accretion of hydrogen-rich matter onto C/O and O/Ne white dwarfs in binary systems leads to unstable thermonuclear ignition of the accreted envelope, triggering a convective thermonuclear runaway and a subsequent classical, recurrent, or symbiotic nova. Prompted by uncertainties in the composition at the base of the accreted envelope at the onset of convection, as well as the range of abundances detected in nova ejecta, we examine the effects of varying the composition of the accreted material. For high accretion rates and carbon mass fractions < 0.002, we find that carbon, which is usually assumed to trigger the runaway via proton captures, is instead depleted and converted to 14N. Additionally, we quantify the importance of 3He, finding that convection is triggered by 3He+3He reactions for 3He mass fractions > 0.002. These different triggering mechanisms, which occur for critical…
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