Sub-Chandrasekhar White Dwarf Mergers as the Progenitors of Type Ia Supernovae
Marten H. van Kerkwijk (1,2,3), Philip Chang (4), Stephen Justham (2), ((1) UofT, (2) KIAA/PKU, (3) Caltech, (4) CITA)

TL;DR
This paper proposes that sub-Chandrasekhar white dwarf mergers are the primary progenitors of Type Ia supernovae, addressing previous issues with explosion mechanisms and formation rates.
Contribution
It introduces a merger-based scenario for Type Ia supernovae involving sub-Chandrasekhar mass remnants, explaining observed rates and luminosity variations.
Findings
Merger remnants have rapidly rotating cores with dense disks.
Compressional heating from accretion likely causes central carbon ignition.
The scenario accounts for supernova rates and luminosity diversity.
Abstract
Type Ia supernovae are generally thought to be due to the thermonuclear explosions of carbon-oxygen white dwarfs with masses near the Chandrasekhar mass. This scenario, however, has two long-standing problems. First, the explosions do not naturally produce the correct mix of elements, but have to be finely tuned to proceed from sub-sonic deflagration to super-sonic detonation. Second, population models and observations give formation rates of near-Chandrasekhar white dwarfs that are far too small. Here, we suggest that type Ia supernovae instead result from mergers of roughly equal-mass carbon-oxygen white dwarfs, including those that produce sub-Chandrasekhar mass remnants. Numerical studies of such mergers have shown that the remnants consist of rapidly rotating cores that contain most of the mass and are hottest in the center, surrounded by dense, small disks. We argue that the disks…
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