The white dwarf's carbon fraction as a secondary parameter of Type Ia supernovae
Sebastian T. Ohlmann, Markus Kromer, Michael Fink, R\"udiger Pakmor,, Ivo R. Seitenzahl, Stuart A. Sim, Friedrich K. Roepke

TL;DR
This study investigates how the initial carbon profile in white dwarf progenitors influences Type Ia supernova explosions, revealing that carbon fraction acts as a secondary parameter affecting observable properties.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the impact of progenitor carbon profiles on supernova explosion dynamics and observables, challenging the assumption of homogeneous composition.
Findings
Lower nuclear energy release in carbon-depleted models.
Less Ni-56 produced in carbon-depleted supernovae.
Carbon fraction has a secondary effect on supernova observables.
Abstract
Binary stellar evolution calculations predict that Chandrasekhar-mass carbon/oxygen white dwarfs (WDs) show a radially varying profile for the composition with a carbon depleted core. Many recent multi-dimensional simulations of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia), however, assume the progenitor WD has a homogeneous chemical composition. In this work, we explore the impact of different initial carbon profiles of the progenitor WD on the explosion phase and on synthetic observables in the Chandrasekhar-mass delayed detonation model. Spectra and light curves are compared to observations to judge the validity of the model. The explosion phase is simulated using the finite volume supernova code LEAFS, which is extended to treat different compositions of the progenitor WD. The synthetic observables are computed with the Monte Carlo radiative transfer code ARTIS. Differences in binding energies of…
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