Mixing in classical novae: a 2-D sensitivity study
Jordi Casanova (UPC Barcelona), Jordi Jose (UPC Barcelona), Enrique, Garcia-Berro (UPC Barcelona), Alan Calder (SUNY Stony Brook), Steven N. Shore, (U Pisa)

TL;DR
This study uses 2D simulations to explore Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities as a natural mechanism for mixing core material into the accreted envelope in classical novae, aligning with observed enrichment levels.
Contribution
It demonstrates through multidimensional simulations that Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities can naturally cause the observed mixing in classical novae.
Findings
Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities can induce sufficient mixing.
Results are robust across different simulation parameters.
Mixing levels match observational data.
Abstract
Classical novae are explosive phenomena that take place in stellar binary systems. They are powered by mass transfer from a low-mass, main sequence star onto a white dwarf. The material piles up under degenerate conditions and a thermonuclear runaway ensues. The energy released by the suite of nuclear processes operating at the envelope heats the material up to peak temperatures of ~ (1 - 4) \times 108 K. During these events, about 10-4 - 10-5 M\odot, enriched in CNO and other intermediate-mass elements, are ejected into the interstellar medium. To account for the gross observational properties of classical novae (in particular, a metallicity enhancement in the ejecta above solar values), numerical models assume mixing between the (solar-like) material transferred from the companion and the outermost layers (CO- or ONe-rich) of the underlying white dwarf. The nature of the mixing…
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