Quark-Novae in Neutron Star-White-Dwarf Binaries: A model for luminous (spin-down powered) sub-Chandrasekhar-mass Type Ia Supernovae ?
Rachid Ouyed (1), Jan E. Staff (2) ((1) Physics, Astronomy,, University of Calgary, AB, Canada, (2) Physics, Astronomy, Louisiana State, University, LA, USA)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a model where Quark-Novae in neutron star-white dwarf binaries can produce luminous, spin-down powered sub-Chandrasekhar-mass Type Ia supernovae, potentially impacting cosmological measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model for Type Ia supernovae involving Quark-Novae in binary systems, highlighting their unique light-curve and spectral features.
Findings
QNe-Ia can mimic standard SNe-Ia brightness but have distinct spectral and light-curve properties.
Spin-down power significantly influences the brightness and duration of QNe-Ia.
Potential contamination of cosmological samples by QNe-Ia could bias measurements of cosmic parameters.
Abstract
We show that appealing to a Quark-Nova (QN) in a tight binary system containing a massive neutron star and a CO white dwarf (WD), a Type Ia explosion could occur. The QN ejecta collides with the WD driving a shock that triggers Carbon burning under degenerate conditions (the QN-Ia). The conditions in the compressed low-mass WD (M_WD < 0.9M_sun) in our model mimics those of a Chandrasekhar mass WD. The spin-down luminosity from the QN compact remnant (the quark star) provides additional power that makes the QN-Ia light-curve brighter and broader than a standard SN-Ia with similar 56Ni yield. In QNe-Ia, photometry and spectroscopy are not necessarily linked since the kinetic energy of the ejecta has a contribution from spin-down power and nuclear decay. Although QNe-Ia may not obey the Phillips relationship, their brightness and their relatively "normal looking" light-curves means they…
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