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arXiv:1808.03222 [astro-ph.HE]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Nucleosynthesis Constraints on the Explosion Mechanism for Type Ia Supernovae

Kanji Mori, Michael A. Famiano, Toshitaka Kajino, Toshio Suzuki, Peter M. Garnavich, Grant J. Mathews, Roland Diehl, Shing-Chi Leung, Ken'ichi Nomoto

Published 2018-08-09Version 1

Observations of type Ia supernovae include information about the characteristic nucleosynthesis associated with these thermonuclear explosions. We consider observational constraints from iron-group elemental and isotopic ratios, to compare with various models obtained with the most-realistic recent treatment of electron captures. The nucleosynthesis is sensitive to the highest white-dwarf central densities. Hence, nucleosynthesis yields can distinguish high-density Chandrasekhar-mass models from lower-density burning models such as white-dwarf mergers. We discuss new results of post-processing nucleosynthesis for two spherical models (deflagration and/or delayed detonation models) based upon new electron capture rates. We also consider cylindrical and 3D explosion models (including deflagration, delayed-detonation, or a violent merger model). Although there are uncertainties in the observational constraints, we identify some trends in observations and the models. We {make a new comparison of the models with elemental and isotopic ratios from five observed supernovae and three supernova remnants. We find that the models and data tend to fall into two groups. In one group low-density cores such as in a 3D merger model are slightly more consistent with the nucleosynthesis data, while the other group is slightly better identified with higher-density cores such as in single-degenerate 1D-3D deflagration models. Hence, we postulate that both types of environments appear to contribute nearly equally to observed SNIa. We also note that observational constraints on the yields of $^{54}$Cr and $^{54}$Fe, if available, might be used as a means to clarify the degree of geometrical symmetry of SNIa explosions.

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