
TL;DR
This paper discusses binary evolution principles, focusing on the formation of subdwarf B stars and Type Ia supernova progenitors, highlighting how binary interactions influence stellar evolution and galaxy properties.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of binary evolution channels, models for sdB stars, and their application to understanding UV excess in elliptical galaxies and supernova progenitors.
Findings
Binary models can reproduce field and cluster sdB stars.
Binary interactions likely cause the UV-upturn in elliptical galaxies.
Birth rates and delay times for SNe Ia channels are quantified.
Abstract
In this talk, we present the general principles of binary evolution and give two examples. The first example is the formation of subdwarf B stars (sdBs) and their application to the long-standing problem of ultraviolet excess (also known as UV-upturn) in elliptical galaxies. The second is for the progenitors of type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia). We discuss the main binary interactions, i.e., stable Roche lobe overflow (RLOF) and common envelope (CE) evolution, and show evolutionary channels leading to the formation of various binary-related objects. In the first example, we show that the binary model of sdB stars of Han et al. (2002, 2003) can reproduce field sdB stars and their counterparts, extreme horizontal branch (EHB) stars, in globular clusters. By applying the binary model to the study of evolutionary population synthesis, we have obtained an ``a priori'' model for the UV-upturn of…
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