Title: there are four dimensions of parameter space:
1EVOLUTIONARY GRID OF ACCRETING WHITE DWARF
COMPANIONS IN CATACLYSMIC VARIABLES J. BENJAMIN,
M. JENSEN, S. NADEAU, L.A. NELSON (BISHOPS U.)
EVOLUTIONARY MODELS
INTRODUCTION
METHOD OF CALCULATION
REPRESENTATIVE CASE
PARAMETER SPACE
- after 10-4 10-5 M8 of H has been accreted,
compressional heating of the partially degenerate
gas leads to a TNR (see Figures 1 2). Both
cases are characterized by a rapidly growing
temperature inversion near the base of the
accreted material. - the critical mass of H that needs to be accreted
in order to produce the flash is strongly
dependent on the value of MWD and is also
dependent on M and the assumed core temperature
(Tc). Note that the recurrence (i.e., flash)
period is directly proportional to DMacc/M. - the table below shows the critical values of
DMacc (in units of M8) for different central
temperatures (Tc) and two different values of the
accretion rate. MWD has been set equal to 0.9 M8.
WHITE DWARF ACCRETION
TWO COMPUTATIONAL APPROACHES
- Henyey-type code (quasi-hydrostatic
approximation) - Fontaine, Graboske and Van Horn EOS Magni
Mazzitelli EOS - OPAL and Alexander low-temperature radiative
opacities Hubbard Lampe conductive opacities - isenthalpic, spherically symmetric accretion flow
- kinetic energy of accretion flow assumed to be
dissipated radiatively by shocks - Envelope Evolution
- the PDEs of stellar structure are solved using
the Method of Lines. The properties of the core
are dictated by the boundary conditions at the
base of the envelope. - zero-flux condition OR
- Tc Tboundary constant
- there are four dimensions of parameter space
- MWD
- M
- Chemical Composition (X,Z)
- Initial conditions at the onset of accretion
- thermal profile/history
- chemical profile
- White Dwarfs in interacting binary systems can
accrete H/He-rich matter - this leads to a number of diverse and important
phenomena - Classical Novae (TNR)
- Symbiotic novae
- transient phenomena
- Type Ia SNe
- quasi-steady nuclear burning (Supersoft Xray
Sources SSXSs) - the most comprehensively studied and observed
systems are CVs and SSXSs - we report on the progress that we have made in
studying the effect of accretion for a grid of
models covering a significant slice of parameter
space
GRID OF MODELS
- we calculated evolutionary tracks for the
following cases - 0.6 M8 ? M ? 1.35 M8
- 6.5 ? log Tc (K) ? 8.0
- 10-10 M8 yr-1 ? M ? 10-6 M8 yr-1
- X0.7 Z0.02 CO cores
TEMPERATURE PROFILE
INTERACTING BINARIES
NOVA PROPERTIES
- as noted by van den Heuvel (1992), amongst
others, the properties of the nova event are very
dependent on MWD and M - our models exhibit four distinct types of
behavior - if the mass transfer rate exceeds 10-6 M8 yr-1
then the WD swells up and overfills its Roche
lobe (i.e., becomes a Red Giant) - for lower Ms (10-7 M8 yr-1) we found that the
WDs exhibit weak pulses (i.e., quasi-steady
nuclear burning) - for many of these models, the thick He shell
beneath the H shell undergoes explosive nuclear
burning (He TNR) - for the lowest Ms (lt 10-8 M8 yr-1 ) the WD
experiences mild to strong H flashes (TNR) - the transition between each of these regimes
depends sensitively on MWD, M, and the thermal
history of the WD - Figure 3 shows the transition from TNRs to
quasi-steady burning as the mass-transfer rate is
gradually increased (for the MWD 1 M8 cases).
Note that the cycles are composed of two distinct
phases (i) the on phase which corresponds to
the maximum luminosity and, (ii) the much longer
off phase. - Figure 4 shows the temporal evolution of the
envelopes temperature profile through several
nova cycles
MODEL
- CVs are close, interacting binary systems in
which a low-mass (lt 2 M8) star transfers mass to
its white dwarf (WD) companion via Roche-Lobe
overflow - the accreted gas may be channeled directly onto
the WD (e.g., polars) or may form an accretion
disk that experiences instabilities (e.g., dwarf
novae DNe)
- depending on the mass and temperature of the WD
and on the mass accretion rate (M), a
thermonuclear runaway (TNR) can ensue causing
most of the accreted matter to be ejected from
the binary system (e.g., Nova Cygni Porb 1.95
hr) - TNRs can be periodic and recur on cycles of the
order of days to more than 106 years. In some
cases the mass transfer rate is sufficiently high
that quasi-steady burning occurs on the surface
of the WD.
Figure 1 Thermal profile of a 0.7 M8 CO WD
undergoing accretion at 1x10-8 M8 yr-1. Each
curve corresponds to an evolutionary time (Dt)
measured relative to the first model in the
sequence. Log T(K) is plotted against the log of
the mass fraction (as measured from the surface).
Figure 2 Thermal profile of a 0.7 M8 CO WD
undergoing accretion at 1x10-8 M8 yr-1. Each
curve corresponds to an evolutionary time (Dt)
measured relative to the first model in the
sequence. Log T(K) is plotted against the log of
the mass fraction (as measured from the surface).
WD OBSERVATIONS
- one important question concerns the evolution of
the gravo-thermal properties of the WD on both
short- and long-term timescales as it evolves in
CV/SSXS systems - for example, Nelson et al. (2003) show that the
orbital period distribution of galactic novae can
be reconciled with the observed one if it is
assumed that the internal temperature of the WDs
decreases with decreasing Porb - Gansicke (1997) using spectroscopic data from IUE
and HST concludes that the temperatures of the
seven magnetic CVs in his sample decrease with
decreasing Porb. This conclusion is in perfect
agreement with our understanding of the secular
evolution of CVs. - ideally we need to observe the DNe subclass in a
state of prolonged quiescence while M is small
(and the accretion luminosity is unimportant) - multiwavelength analyses of the boundary layers
in WDs could be used to infer the interior
temperatures of WDs - this type of observational program is currently
being undertaken (Howell et al. 1999 Szkody et
al. 2002)
LUMINOSITY EVOLUTION
INTERIOR TEMPERATURE EVOLUTION
SUMMARY
- as has been shown by several researchers (e.g.,
Paczynski and Zytkow 1978 Iben 1982 Sion and
Starrfield 1985, 1994 Prialnik and Kovetz 1995),
the behavior and properties of the nova events
can depend sensitively on the mass of the WD and
the accretion rate - we have also systematically explored the effects
of assuming different initial gravo-thermal
profiles and find that they too can be important
factors
FUTURE WORK
PREPRINT REQUESTS LNELSON_at_UBISHOPS.CA
- although we have explored a significant slice of
parameter space, we need to examine the evolution
for a much wider range of initial conditions
(e.g., thermal histories) - we plan to investigate the dependence of TNRs on
chemical composition (i.e., varying the H
abundance and metallicity) - we will extend the grid by coupling the evolution
of the WDs self-consistently with the evolution
of the parent CV systems (this implies the
inclusion of time-dependent mass-accretion rates) - finally we plan to carry out population syntheses
to determine whether steady-burning sources
(e.g., SSXSs) can be the true progenitors of Type
Ia SNe
Figure 3 Temporal evolution of the luminosity
for several representative cases. Mass transfer
rate of 1x10-9 M8 yr-1 (i) Black curve MWD
0.95 M8 (ii) Red curve MWD 1.0 M8 (iii)
Blue curve MWD 1.1 M8. Setting MWD 1.0 M8,
and increasing M yields the following (iv) Green
curve M 6x10-8 M8 yr-1 (v) Pink curve M
5x10-7 M8 yr-1. The inset shows the evolution of
case (iv) on an appropriately short time scale.
Note the transition from strong TNRs to mild
recurrent flashes. Higher Ms lead to quasi-steady
nuclear burning (pink curve).
Figure 4 Temporal evolution of the internal
temperature of several shells of a 1 M8 white
dwarf accreting mass at 1x10-8 M8 yr-1. The
evolution is followed over several flashes. The
log of the mass fractions (as measured from the
surface) are -7 (black curve), -6.5, -6, -5.5,
-5, and -4.5 (cyan curve), respectively. Note the
temperature inversion near the flash event.
This research was supported in part by the
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
(NSERC) of Canada.