We study the violent phase of the merger of massive binary white dwarf systems. Our aim is to characterize the conditions for explosive burning to occur, and identify a possible explosion mechanism of Type Ia supernovae. The primary components of our model systems are carbon- oxygen (C/O) white dwarfs, while the secondaries are made either of C/O or of pure helium. We account for tidal effects in the initial conditions in a self-consistent way, and consider initially well-separated systems with slow inspiral rates. We study the merger evolution using an adaptive mesh refinement, reactive, Eulerian code in three dimensions, assuming symmetry across the orbital plane. We use a corotating reference frame to minimize the effects of numerical diffusion, and solve for self-gravity using a multigrid approach. We find a novel detonation mechanism in C/O mergers with massive primaries. Here, the detonation occurs in the primary's core and relies on the combined action of tidal heating, accretion heating, and self-heating due to nuclear burning. The exploding structure is compositionally stratified, with a reverse shock formed at the surface of the dense ejecta. The existence of such a shock has not been reported elsewhere. The explosion energy (1.6 × 1051 erg) and 56Ni mass (0.86M⊙) are consistent with an SN Ia at the bright end of the luminosity distribution, with an approximated decline rate of Δm15(B) ≈ 0.99. Our study does not support double-detonation scenarios in the case of a system with a 0.6M⊙ helium secondary and a 0.9M⊙ primary. Although the accreted helium detonates, it fails to ignite carbon at the base of the boundary layer or in the primary's core.
CITATION STYLE
Fenn, D., Plewa, T., & Gawryszczak, A. (2016). No double detonations but core carbon ignitions in high-resolution, grid-based simulations of binary white dwarf mergers. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 462(3), 2486–2505. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw1831
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