Suppression of Shock X-ray Emission in Novae from Turbulent Mixing with Cool Gas
Brian D. Metzger, Lachlan Lancaster, Rebecca Diesing

TL;DR
This paper proposes that turbulence behind shocks in novae mixes hot and cool gas, significantly reducing X-ray emission and explaining observed luminosities that are much lower than expected.
Contribution
It introduces a turbulence-driven mixing model that accounts for suppressed X-ray emission in novae, supported by analytic and simulation-based arguments.
Findings
Turbulent mixing can balance shock heating, reducing hot gas volume.
X-ray luminosities match observations if ~1% of shock energy drives turbulence.
The mechanism may also apply to other shock-powered transients.
Abstract
Shock interaction in classical novae occurs when a fast outflow from the white dwarf > 1000 km s/s collides with a slower, cooler shell of gas released earlier in the outburst. The shocks radiate across the electromagnetic spectrum, from radio synchrotron to GeV gamma-rays. The hot shocked gas also emits >~ keV thermal X-rays, typically peaking weeks after the eruption, once the ejecta becomes transparent to photoelectric absorption. However, the observed hard X-ray luminosities are typically >4 orders of magnitude smaller than would be naively expected given the powerful shocks implied by the gamma-rays. We argue that a key missing piece to this puzzle is turbulence behind the shock, driven, e.g., by thin-shell and/or thermal instabilities. Turbulence efficiently mixes the hot X-ray emitting gas with cooler gas, sapping the hot gas of energy faster than it can directly radiate. Using…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
