English

Tidally-induced thermonuclear Supernovae

Astrophysics 2009-07-22 v1

Abstract

We discuss the results of 3D simulations of tidal disruptions of white dwarfs by moderate-mass black holes as they may exist in the cores of globular clusters or dwarf galaxies. Our simulations follow self-consistently the hydrodynamic and nuclear evolution from the initial parabolic orbit over the disruption to the build-up of an accretion disk around the black hole. For strong enough encounters (pericentre distances smaller than about 1/3 of the tidal radius) the tidal compression is reversed by a shock and finally results in a thermonuclear explosion. These explosions are not restricted to progenitor masses close to the Chandrasekhar limit, we find exploding examples throughout the whole white dwarf mass range. There is, however, a restriction on the masses of the involved black holes: black holes more massive than 2×1052\times 10^5 M_\odot swallow a typical 0.6 M_\odot dwarf before their tidal forces can overwhelm the star's self-gravity. Therefore, this mechanism is characteristic for black holes of moderate masses. The material that remains bound to the black hole settles into an accretion disk and produces an X-ray flare close to the Eddington limit of LEdd1041erg/sMbh/1000ML_{\rm Edd} \simeq 10^{41} {\rm erg/s} M_{\rm bh}/1000 M_\odot$), typically lasting for a few months. The combination of a peculiar thermonuclear supernova together with an X-ray flare thus whistle-blows the existence of such moderate-mass black holes. The next generation of wide field space-based instruments should be able to detect such events.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0811.2129,
  title  = {Tidally-induced thermonuclear Supernovae},
  author = {S. Rosswog and E. Ramirez-Ruiz and W. R. Hix},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0811.2129},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

8 pages, 2 figures, EuroWD08

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