The Effect of Different Type Ia Supernova Progenitors on Galactic Chemical Evolution
F. Matteucci (1,2), E. Spitoni (1), S. Recchi (3), R. Valiante (4), ((1) Dipartimento di Astronomia, Universita' di Trieste, (2) I.N.A.F., Osservatorio Astronomico di Trieste, (3) Institute of Astronomy, Vienna, University, (4) Dipartimento di Astronomia, Universita' di Firenze)

TL;DR
This study investigates how different models of Type Ia supernova progenitors influence the chemical evolution of the Milky Way, finding that certain progenitor scenarios align better with observed metallicity distributions.
Contribution
It compares various progenitor models, including single and double degenerate scenarios, and assesses their impact on galactic chemical evolution using detailed simulations.
Findings
Models with 10-13% prompt Type Ia supernovae fit observations well.
High prompt supernova fractions (>30%) worsen model-data agreement.
Some empirical models without prompt supernovae are inconsistent with observed metallicity distributions.
Abstract
Our aim is to show how different hypotheses about Type Ia supernova progenitors can affect Galactic chemical evolution. We include different Type Ia SN progenitor models, identified by their distribution of time delays, in a very detailed chemical evolution model for the Milky Way which follows the evolution of several chemical species. We test the single degenerate and the double degenerate models for supernova Ia progenitors, as well as other more empirical models based on differences in the time delay distributions. We find that assuming the single degenerate or the double degenerate scenario produces negligible differences in the predicted [O/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] relation. On the other hand, assuming a percentage of prompt (exploding in the first 100 Myr) Type Ia supernovae of 50%, or that the maximum Type Ia rate is reached after 3-4 Gyr from the beginning of star formation, as suggested…
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