The delay time distribution of type Ia supernovae: a comparison between theory and observation
N. Mennekens, D. Vanbeveren, J.P. De Greve, E. De Donder

TL;DR
This study compares theoretical models of type Ia supernova delay times with observations, finding the double degenerate scenario fits better and highlighting the importance of binary evolution details.
Contribution
It provides a detailed population synthesis analysis contrasting single and double degenerate scenarios, incorporating recent binary evolution physics.
Findings
Double degenerate scenario matches observed delay time distribution shape.
Most double degenerate supernovae form through a single common envelope phase.
Theoretical supernova rates are at least three times lower than observed, suggesting additional factors like stellar rotation are important.
Abstract
We investigate the contribution of different formation scenarios for type Ia supernovae in elliptical galaxies. The single degenerate scenario (a white dwarf accreting from a late main sequence or red giant companion) is tested against the double degenerate scenario (the spiral-in and merging of two white dwarfs through the emission of gravitational wave radiation). We use a population number synthesis code incorporating the latest physical results in binary evolution, and allowing to differentiate between certain physical scenarios (e.g. description of common envelope evolution) and evolutionary parameters (e.g. mass transfer efficiency during Roche lobe overflow). The obtained theoretical distributions of the delay times of type Ia supernovae are compared to those which are observed, both in morphological shape and absolute number of events. The critical dependency of these…
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