The asymmetry of white dwarf double detonations and the observed scatter around the Phillips relation
Alexander Holas, Friedrich K. Roepke, R\"udiger Pakmor, Fionntan P. Callan, Josh Pollin, Stuart A. Sim, Christine E. Collins, Luke J. Shingles, Javier Mor\'an-Fraile

TL;DR
This study investigates whether off-center ignition in white dwarf double detonations can explain the scatter in Type Ia supernova observations, finding that asymmetries cause viewing angle effects but are not the main source of scatter.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that off-center ignition causes asymmetries affecting observables but does not account for the observed scatter, suggesting helium shell mass reduction as a solution.
Findings
Off-center ignition causes asymmetries and viewing angle effects.
Line blanketing by intermediate-mass and iron-group elements influences observables.
Reducing helium shell mass may improve agreement with observed Phillips relation.
Abstract
Recent Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) simulations featuring a double detonation scenario have managed to reproduce the overall trend of the Phillips relation reasonably well. However, most, if not all, multidimensional simulations struggle to reproduce the scatter of observed SNe around this relation, exceeding it substantially. In this study, we investigate whether the excessive scatter around the Phillips relation can be caused by an off-center ignition of the carbon-oxygen (CO) core in the double detonation scenario and if this can help constrain possible SN Ia explosion channels. We simulated the detonation of three different initial CO white dwarfs of , , and , artificially ignited at systematically offset locations using the Arepo code. After nucleosynthetic postprocessing, we generated synthetic observables using the Artis code and compared these results…
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.
