Nova contributions to the chemical evolution of the Milky Way
Alex J. Kemp, Amanda I. Karakas, Andrew R. Casey, Benoit Cote, Robert, G. Izzard, Zara Osborn

TL;DR
This study models the impact of nova nucleosynthesis on the Milky Way's chemical evolution, revealing significant contributions to isotopes like 13C and 15N, especially in early galaxy stages, using synthetic nova populations and chemical evolution simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a combined modeling approach using binary population synthesis and chemical evolution codes to quantify nova contributions to galactic isotopic abundances.
Findings
Novae can produce up to 35% of Galactic 13C and 15N mass.
Massive white dwarf novae significantly influence isotopic abundances.
Novae impact isotopic ratios more at early galaxy stages.
Abstract
Context. The explosive burning that drives nova eruptions results in unique nucleosynthesis that heavily over-produces certain isotopes relative to the solar abundance. However, novae are often ignored when considering the chemical evolution of our Galaxy due to their low ejecta masses. Aims. In this work, we use previously computed synthetic nova populations and the galactic chemical evolution code OMEGA+ to assess the impact that novae have on the evolution of stable elemental and isotopic abundances. Methods. We combine populations of novae computed using the binary population synthesis code binary_c with the galactic chemical evolution code OMEGA+ and detailed, white dwarf mass-dependent nova yields to model the nucleosynthetic contributions of novae to the evolution of the Milky Way. We consider three different nova yield profiles, each corresponding to a different set of nova…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
