Hydrodynamic Studies of the Evolution of Recurrent, Symbiotic, and Dwarf Novae: The White Dwarf Components are Growing in Mass
S. Starrfield, F. X. Timmes, C. Iliadis, W. R. Hix, W. D. Arnett, C., Meakin, W. M. Sparks

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic simulations to show that white dwarfs in symbiotic systems tend to gain mass over time, challenging previous assumptions about steady burning and mass loss, with implications for supernova progenitors.
Contribution
The paper presents new 1-D hydrodynamic simulations demonstrating white dwarfs grow in mass during recurrent novae, contradicting steady burning models and providing insights into supernova progenitors.
Findings
White dwarfs gain mass in all simulated scenarios.
Only a small fraction of accreted matter is ejected.
Pre-outburst systems are too cool for X-ray detection.
Abstract
Symbiotic binaries are systems containing white dwarfs (WDs) and red giants. Symbiotic novae are those systems in which thermonuclear eruptions occur on the WD components. These are to be distinguished from events driven by accretion disk instabilities analogous to dwarf novae eruptions in cataclysmic variable outbursts. Another class of symbiotic systems are those in which the WD is extremely luminous and it seems likely that quiescent nuclear burning is ongoing on the accreting WD. A fundamental question is the secular evolution of the WD. Do the repeated outbursts or quiescent burning in these accreting systems cause the WD to gain or lose mass? If it is gaining mass, can it eventually reach the Chandrasekhar Limit and become a supernova (a SN Ia if it can hide the hydrogen and helium in the system)? In order to better understand these systems, we have begun a new study of the…
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