Hybrid C-O-Ne white dwarfs as progenitors of type Ia supernovae: dependence on Urca process and mixing assumptions
P. Denissenkov (U Vic), J. W. Truran (U Chicago), F. Herwig (U Vic),, S. Jones (U Vic), B. Paxton (UC Santa Barbara), K. Nomoto (U Tokyo), T., Suzuki (Nihon U, Tokyo), H. Toki (Osaka U)

TL;DR
This study explores how hybrid C-O-Ne white dwarfs, formed through off-center carbon ignition and influenced by mixing processes, can serve as progenitors for type Ia supernovae, affecting explosion characteristics.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed 1D stellar evolution model of hybrid white dwarfs considering Urca processes and mixing assumptions, highlighting their impact on supernova progenitors.
Findings
Hybrid WDs can reach explosive C ignition with diverse mixing assumptions.
Lower C/O ratios in hybrid WDs may explain SNe Ia diversity.
Convective Urca shell flashes occur near Chandrasekhar limit.
Abstract
When carbon is ignited off-centre in a CO core of a super-AGB star, its burning in a convective shell tends to propagate to the centre. Whether the C flame will actually be able to reach the centre depends on the efficiency of extra mixing beneath the C convective shell. Whereas thermohaline mixing is too inefficient to interfere with the C-flame propagation, convective boundary mixing can prevent the C burning from reaching the centre. As a result, a C-O-Ne white dwarf (WD) is formed, after the star has lost its envelope. Such a "hybrid" WD has a small CO core surrounded by a thick ONe zone. In our 1D stellar evolution computations, the hybrid WD is allowed to accrete C-rich material, as if it were in a close binary system and accreted H-rich material from its companion with a sufficiently high rate at which the accreted H would be processed into He under stationary conditions,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
