Helium ignition in rotating magnetized CO white dwarfs leading to fast and faint rather than classical type Ia supernovae
P. Neunteufel, S.-C. Yoon, and N. Langer

TL;DR
This study investigates how rotation and magnetic effects influence helium ignition in accreting CO white dwarfs, suggesting such processes lead to faint, fast supernovae rather than classical Type Ia explosions.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed model including rotation and magnetic fields, showing their significant impact on white dwarf evolution and ignition conditions.
Findings
Magnetic angular momentum transport causes quasi solid-body rotation.
Rotating models can accrete more mass before ignition compared to non-rotating models.
Helium ignition densities are significantly reduced by rotation, affecting explosion outcomes.
Abstract
Based mostly on stellar models which do not include rotation, CO white dwarfs which accrete helium at rates of about have been put forward as candidate progenitors for a number of transient astrophysical phenomena, including supernovae of Type Ia, and the peculiar and fainter Type Iax supernovae. Here we study the impact of accretion-induced spin-up including the subsequent magnetic field generation, angular momentum transport, and viscous heating on the white dwarf evolution up to the point of helium ignition. We resolve the structure of the helium accreting white dwarf models with a one dimensional Langrangian hydrodynamic code, modified to include rotational and magnetic effects. We find magnetic angular momentum transport, which leads to quasi solid-body rotation, profoundly impacts the evolution of the white dwarf models. Our rotating…
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