Nickel-Rich Outflows from Accretion Disks Formed by the Accretion-Induced Collapse of White Dwarfs
B.D. Metzger, A.L. Piro, E. Quataert

TL;DR
This paper models the formation of Ni-rich outflows from accretion disks around neutron stars formed by white dwarf collapse, predicting detectable, short-lived supernova-like transients with distinct spectra.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed simulation of accretion disk evolution post-AIC, revealing Ni-rich outflows and potential observable transients, a novel insight into AIC phenomena.
Findings
AIC can produce Ni-rich outflows with up to 0.02 solar masses.
Resulting transients peak around 1 day and are detectable by current surveys.
AIC transients are spectroscopically distinct from typical supernovae.
Abstract
A white dwarf (WD) approaching the Chandrasekhar mass may in several cases undergo accretion-induced collapse (AIC) to a neutron star (NS) before a thermonuclear explosion ensues. It has generally been assumed that AIC does not produce a detectable supernova (SN). If, however, the progenitor WD is rapidly rotating (as may be expected due to its prior accretion), a centrifugally supported disk forms around the NS upon collapse. We calculate the subsequent evolution of this accretion disk using time-dependent height-integrated simulations with initial conditions taken from the AIC calculations of Dessart et al. (2006). Initially, the disk is cooled by neutrinos and its composition is driven neutron-rich (electron fraction Ye ~ 0.1) by electron captures. However, as the disk viscously spreads, it is irradiated by neutrinos from the central proto-NS, which dramatically alters its…
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