The Detonation Mechanism of the Pulsationally-Assisted Gravitationally-Confined Detonation Model of Type Ia Supernovae
G. C. Jordan IV, C.Graziani, R. T. Fisher, D. M. Townsley, C. Meakin,, K. Weide, L. B. Reid, J. Norris, R. Hudson, D. Q. Lamb

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new pulsationally-assisted gravitationally confined detonation model for Type Ia supernovae, showing that increased deflagration energy leads to conditions favorable for detonation, aligning better with observations.
Contribution
The study presents a novel detonation mechanism involving stellar pulsation and contraction, supported by 3D simulations, improving agreement with observed supernova properties.
Findings
Detonation conditions achieved in all simulated models.
Higher deflagration energy enhances detonation likelihood.
Models better match observed supernova energies and nickel yields.
Abstract
We describe the detonation mechanism comprising the "Pulsationally Assisted" Gravitationally Confined Detonation (GCD) model of Type Ia supernovae SNe Ia. This model is analogous to the previous GCD model reported in Jordan et al.(2008); however, the chosen initial conditions produce a substantively different detonation mechanism, resulting from a larger energy release during the deflagration phase. The resulting final kinetic energy and nickel-56 yields conform better to observational values than is the case for the "classical" GCD models. In the present class of models, the ignition of a deflagration phase leads to a rising, burning plume of ash. The ash breaks out of the surface of the white dwarf, flows laterally around the star, and converges on the collision region at the antipodal point from where it broke out. The amount of energy released during the deflagration phase is enough…
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