Radiative shocks create environments for dust formation in novae
Andrea M. Derdzinski, Brian D. Metzger, Davide Lazzati

TL;DR
This paper proposes that dust formation in novae occurs in the cool, dense shells behind radiative shocks, explaining observed dust types, sizes, and masses through a combined chemical and thermodynamic model.
Contribution
It introduces a model combining molecular chemistry and nucleation theory to explain dust formation in nova shocks, accounting for observed dust properties and chemical diversity.
Findings
Dust grains grow to sizes >0.1μm, matching IR observations.
High post-shock densities enable rapid dust nucleation.
Both carbon and silicate dust formation explained by chemical heterogeneity.
Abstract
Classical novae commonly show evidence of rapid dust formation within months of the outburst. However, it is unclear how molecules and grains are able to condense within the ejecta, given the potentially harsh environment created by ionizing radiation from the white dwarf. Motivated by the evidence for powerful radiative shocks within nova outflows, we propose that dust formation occurs within the cool, dense shell behind these shocks. We incorporate a simple molecular chemistry network and classical nucleation theory with a model for the thermodynamic evolution of the post-shock gas, in order to demonstrate the formation of both carbon and forsterite () grains. The high densities due to radiative shock compression ( cm) result in CO saturation and rapid dust nucleation. Grains grow efficiently to large sizes m, in agreement with IR…
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