Three-dimensional simulations of the interaction between the nova ejecta, the accretion disk, and the companion star
Joana Figueira (UPC Barcelona), Jordi Jose (UPC Barcelona), Enrique, Garcia-Berro (UPC Barcelona), Simon W. Campbell (MPI Astrophysics Garching, and Monash U), Domingo Garcia-Senz (UPC Barcelona), and Shazrene Mohamed, (SAAP Cape Town)

TL;DR
This paper presents 3D simulations of nova ejecta interacting with the accretion disk and companion star, revealing effects on system dynamics, chemical contamination, and implications for future nova cycles.
Contribution
It introduces the first comprehensive 3D SPH simulations of nova ejecta interactions with binary components, exploring parameter effects on system evolution.
Findings
Accretion disk disruption depends on ejecta and disk parameters.
Ejecta can chemically contaminate the secondary star.
Interaction influences future nova cycle conditions.
Abstract
Context. Classical novae are thermonuclear explosions hosted by accreting white dwarfs in stellar binary systems. Material piles up on top of the white dwarf star under mildly degenerate conditions, driving a thermonuclear runaway. The energy released by the suite of nuclear processes operating at the envelope (mostly proton-capture reactions and beta-decays) heats the material up to peak temperatures ranging from 100 to 400 MK. In these events, about 10-3 - 10-7 Msun, enriched in CNO and, sometimes, other intermediate-mass elements (e.g., Ne, Na, Mg, Al), are ejected into the interstellar medium. Aims. To date, most of the efforts undertaken in the modeling of classical nova outbursts have focused on the early stages of the explosion and ejection, ignoring the interaction of the ejecta, first with the accretion disk orbiting the white dwarf, and ultimately with the secondary star.…
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.
