2D simulations of the double-detonation model for thermonuclear transients from low-mass carbon-oxygen white dwarfs
S. A. Sim, M. Fink, M. Kromer, F. K. Roepke, A. J. Ruiter, W., Hillebrandt

TL;DR
This study uses 2D simulations to explore the double-detonation model in low-mass CO white dwarfs, examining how surface He detonations can trigger core explosions and influence observable features of related transients.
Contribution
It extends previous 2D models to low-mass CO WDs, demonstrating the likelihood of core detonation and analyzing observable consequences of different ignition mechanisms.
Findings
Core detonation is probable even in low-mass CO WDs.
Shock compression can produce iron-group elements affecting light curves.
Edge-lit detonations yield intermediate-mass elements with subtle observational signatures.
Abstract
Thermonuclear explosions may arise in binaries in which a CO white dwarf (WD) accretes He from a companion. If the accretion rate allows a sufficiently large mass of He to accumulate prior to ignition of nuclear burning, the He surface layer may detonate, giving rise to an astrophysical transient. Detonation of the He layer generates shock waves that propagate into the underlying CO WD. This might directly ignite a detonation at the edge of the CO WD or compress the core of the WD sufficiently to trigger a CO detonation near the centre. If either ignition mechanism works, the two detonations can release sufficient energy to completely unbind the WD. Here we extend our 2D studies of this double-detonation model to low-mass CO WDs. We investigate the feasibility of triggering a secondary core detonation by shock convergence in low-mass CO WDs and the observable consequences of such a…
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