2 research outputs found
Failed-Detonation Supernovae: Sub-Luminous Low-Velocity Ia Supernovae and Their Kicked Remnant White Dwarfs with Iron-Rich Cores
Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) originate from the thermonuclear explosions of
carbon-oxygen (C-O) white dwarfs (WDs). The single-degenerate scenario is a
well-explored model of SNe Ia where unstable thermonuclear burning initiates in
an accreting, Chandrasekhar-mass WD and forms an advancing flame. By several
proposed physical processes the rising, burning material triggers a detonation,
which subsequently consumes and unbinds the WD. However, if a detonation is not
triggered and the deflagration is too weak to unbind the star, a completely
different scenario unfolds. We explore the failure of the
Gravitationally-Confined Detonation (GCD) mechanism of SNe Ia, and demonstrate
through 2D and 3D simulations the properties of failed-detonation SNe. We show
that failed-detonation SNe expel a few 0.1 solar masses of burned and
partially-burned material and that a fraction of the material falls back onto
the WD, polluting the remnant WD with intermediate-mass and iron-group
elements, that likely segregate to the core forming an WD whose core is iron
rich. The remaining material is asymmetrically ejected at velocities comparable
to the escape velocity from the WD, and in response, the WD is kicked to
velocities of a few hundred km/s. These kicks may unbind the binary and eject a
runaway/hyper-velocity WD. Although the energy and ejected mass of the
failed-detonation SN are a fraction of typical thermonuclear SNe, they are
likely to appear as sub-luminous low-velocity SNe Ia. Such failed detonations
might therefore explain or are related to the observed branch of peculiar SNe
Ia, such as the family of low-velocity sub-luminous SNe (SN 2002cx/SN
2008ha-like SNe).Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; accepted ApJ
