On the evolution of a fossil disk around neutron stars originating from merging white dwarfs
Bai-Sheng Liu, Xiang-Dong Li (NJU)

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution of a fossil disk around neutron stars formed from merging white dwarfs, revealing four distinct phases and potential links to faint X-ray transients near the Galactic center.
Contribution
It provides a detailed, phase-based model of fossil disk evolution post-white dwarf merger, including effects of wind mass loss and disk radii, which was not previously comprehensively studied.
Findings
Disk evolution divided into four phases with specific timescales.
Early bright X-ray emission followed by rapid transient behavior.
Potential explanation for faint X-ray transients near Galactic center.
Abstract
Numerical simulations suggest that merging double white dwarfs (WDs) may produce a newborn neutron star surrounded by a fossil disk. We investigate the evolution of the fossil disk following the coalescence of double WDs. We demonstrate that the evolution can be mainly divided into four phases: the slim disk phase (with time 1 yr), the inner slim plus outer thin disk phase ( yr), the thin disk phase ( yr), and the inner advection-dominated accretion flow plus outer thin disk phase, given the initial disk mass and the disk formation time s. Considering possible wind mass loss from the disk, we present both analytic formulae and numerically calculated results for the disk evolution, which is sensitive to the condition that determines the location of the outer disk radius. The systems are shown to be very…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-pressure geophysics and materials · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
