Pre-explosion Helium Shell Flash in Type Ia Supernovae

2022-10-25 08:24NoamSoker

Noam Soker

Department of Physics, Technion, Haifa, 3200003, Israel; soker@physics.technion.ac.il

Abstract I study the possibility that within the frame of the core degenerate (CD)scenario for type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia)the merger process of the core of the asymptotic giant branch(AGB)star and the white dwarf(WD)maintains an envelope mass of ≈0.03 M⊙that causes a later helium shell flash. I estimate the number of pre-explosion helium shell flash events to be less than a few per cent of all CD scenario SNe Ia.A helium shell flash while the star moves to the left on the HR diagram as a post-AGB star(late thermal pulse—LTP)or along the WD cooling track(very LTP—VLTP) causes the star to expand and become a “born again” AGB star. Merger remnants exploding while still on the AGB form hydrogen-polluted peculiar SNe Ia, while an explosion inside an inflated born-again star results in an early flux excess in the light curve of the SN Ia.The fraction of systems that might show an early flux excess due to LTP/VLTP is <few×10−4 of all SNe Ia,much below the observed fraction.In the frame of the CD scenario SNe Ia with early flux excess result from SN ejecta collision with planetary nebula fallback gas, or from mixing of 56Ni to the outer regions of the SN ejecta.Ongoing sky surveys might find about one case per year where LTP/VLTP influences the SN light curve.

Key words: (stars:) supernovae: general – (stars:) white dwarfs – (stars:) binaries (including multiple): close

1. Introduction

There are several theoretical scenarios for the ignition of carbon oxygen white dwarfs (CO WDs) as type Ia supernovae(SN Ia;e.g.,Hoeflich 2017;Livio&Mazzali 2018;Soker 2018;Wang 2018;Jha et al.2019;Ruiz-Lapuente 2019;Soker 2019;Ruiter 2020 for less than five year old reviews).I classify these scenarios as follows(see Soker 2019 for a comparison table of the six scenarios).

1. The core degenerate (CD) scenario involves the merger of a CO, or HeCO, WD with the core of a massive asymptotic giant branch(AGB)star.The merger remnant is a WD close to the Chandrasekhar mass limit that explodes at a later time. The time to explosion is the merger to explosion delay (MED) time tMED(e.g., Kashi& Soker 2011; Ilkov & Soker 2013; Aznar-Siguán et al.2015). The possibility that the CO WD merger remnant maintains a very small mass of helium and the possible consequences are the subjects of the present study.

2. The double degenerate(DD) scenarios and the DD-MED scenario involve the merger of two WDs (e.g., Iben &Tutukov 1984; Webbink 1984) that lose energy to gravitational waves. Helium might play a crucial role in igniting the carbon in the merging WDs (e.g., Yungelson& Kuranov 2017; Perets et al. 2019; Zenati et al. 2019).The explosion might take place during the merger itself(e.g., Pakmor et al. 2011; Ablimit et al. 2016; Liu et al.2016),or at an MED time(e.g.,Lorén-Aguilar et al.2009;van Kerkwijk et al. 2010; Pakmor et al. 2013; Levanon et al.2015;Levanon&Soker 2019;Neopane et al.2022).

3. In the double detonation (DDet) scenario ignition of helium detonation that a CO-rich WD accretes from a companion subsequently triggers a carbon core detonation that explodes the WD (e.g., Woosley & Weaver 1994;Livne & Arnett 1995; Shen et al. 2018).

4. In the single degenerate (SD) scenario a CO WD accretes hydrogen-rich gas from a non-degenerate companion (e.g.,Whelan & Iben 1973; Han & Podsiadlowski 2004;Orio 2006;Wang et al.2009;Meng&Podsiadlowski 2018).The WD might explode as soon as it approaches the Chandrasekhar mass,or it might explode after a long delay(long MED)after losing angular momentum(e.g.,Piersanti et al. 2003; Di Stefano et al. 2011; Justham 2011).

5. In the WD–WD collision (WWC) scenario the two WDs explode as they collide at about their freefall velocity(e.g., Raskin et al. 2009; Rosswog et al. 2009; Kushnir et al. 2013; Aznar-Siguán et al. 2014). Studies (e.g.,Toonen et al.2018;Hallakoun &Maoz 2019;Hamers&Thompson 2019; Grishin & Perets 2022) found that the WWC scenario contributes <1% of all SNe Ia.

The community is far from a consensus on the leading SN Ia scenario(s). Therefore, studies continue to explore each one of these stellar binary scenarios(e.g.,some examples from the last two years, Cui et al. 2020; Zou et al. 2020; Ablimit 2021;Blondin et al.2021;Chandra et al.2021;Clark et al.2021;Liu et al. 2021; Meng & Luo 2021; Michaely 2021; Wang et al.2021; Yamaguchi et al. 2021; Zeng et al. 2021; Ablimit 2022;Acharova et al. 2022; Chu et al. 2022; Cui & Li 2022;Dimitriadis et al. 2022; Ferrand et al. 2022; Lach et al. 2022;Liu et al. 2022; Livneh & Katz 2022; Mazzali et al. 2022;Pakmor et al.2022;Patra et al.2022;Piersanti et al.2022;Rau& Pan 2022; Ruiz-Lapuente et al. 2022; Sano et al. 2022;Sharon & Kushnir 2022; Shingles et al. 2022).

My view (see table in Soker 2019) is that the CD scenario and DD-MED scenario account for most normal SNe Ia. The main differences between the core-WD merger in the CD scenario and the WD–WD merger in the DD scenario are the hot core and the hydrogen-rich envelope at merger in the CD scenario. In the present study I propose that in some cases the core-WD merger remnant in the CD scenario might maintain a sufficient amount of helium to experience a late helium shell flash, i.e., a late thermal pulse (LTP), or a very late thermal pulse (VLTP).

In single star evolution a post-AGB star might experience an LTP,i.e.,a helium shell flash while it is still burning hydrogen and moves leftward horizontally on the Hertzsprung-Russell(HR) diagram, or it might experience a VLTP, i.e., a helium shell flash after hydrogen burning has ceased and the post-AGB is now on the WD cooling track.The parameters that determine whether a post-AGB star experiences an LTP, a VLTP, or none,are the mass of the helium layer when it leaves the AGB and where in the thermal pulse cycle on the AGB the star departs the AGB(e.g.,Iben 1987;Lawlor&MacDonald 2006).The massive WD that we deal with here is formed from the merger of the core with a WD, and therefore it is not straightforward to deduce its evolution by using single-star evolutionary tracks.I will rather use some general properties of single-star evolution to speculate on possible outcomes for the merger product.

In Section 2 I discuss the conditions for a pre-explosion LTP or VLTP.In Section 3 I explore the way by which the core-WD merger remnant retains some helium,and in Section 4 I refer to the relevant timescales of the scenario. In Section 5 I estimate the rate of SNe Ia where LTP/VLTP might influence the light curve, and in Section 6 I discuss possible consequences. I discuss and summarize this somewhat speculative study in Section 7.

2. The Conditions for a Pre-explosion (Very) Late Thermal Pulse (LTP/VLTP)

The occurrence of a pre-explosion LTP/VLTP requires the following ingredients.It is the first condition(Section 2.1)that I expect to be rare. The second condition (Section 2.2) might hold for a large fraction of SNe Ia.

2.1. Retaining Helium in the Merger Process

In low-mass single-star evolution an LTP (when hydrogen still burns in a thin shell) or a VLTP (after the hydrogen burning has ceased) takes place when the helium mass on top of the CO core when the star leaves the AGB is ΔMHe⋍0.01 M⊙(e.g.,Iben 1987;Lawlor&MacDonald 2006).On the other hand, more massive stars, super-AGB stars that form oxygen-neon cores, have weak thermal pulses with short time intervals between pulses (e.g., Siess 2010; see discussion of thermal pulses by, e.g., Gautschy & Althaus 2007). This implies that only a small hydrogen mass is required to lead to the next pulse. Siess (2010) finds that for a core of about 1.3 M⊙the hydrogen mass advances by only 5×10−5M⊙between pulses. Two comments related to these values are as follows:(1)the young merger product is more extended than an isolated massive WD of the same mass (Neopane et al. 2022),and so the required mass for an LTP/VLTP is larger than for a single star of the same mass. (2) The relevant point for this study is that if the LTP/VLTP is very weak, lasts for a short time and does not contain much mass,then it has only a minor effect on the light curve of the SN Ia.

Following the above discussion I will scale quantities with the requirement of massive helium shell, but note that the scaling might overestimate the mass required for the LTP/VLTP to take place, and it is possible that in all merger remnants the LTP/VLTP is very weak. In any case, I will conclude that a strong LTP/VLTP must be very rare(less than a few per cent) among all SNe Ia that result from the CD scenario.

In the single-star simulations the mass of the post-AGB star that is evolving to become a WD is ⋍0.6–0.9 M⊙,and the WD evolves as a slowly rotating single star. In the scenario I study here the WD is a merger remnant that is rapidly rotating and its mass is ⋍1.4 M⊙.I take the condition on the remaining helium mass in the merger remnant to be

As stated above, because of the high mass of the merger remnant, this mass limit can be even smaller.

Note that condition 1 (Equation (1)) does not require that immediately after the merger process ends this is the helium mass.It rather also allows for an increase of the helium mass by hydrogen burning after the merger ends (Section 3.2).

2.2. A Merger to Explosion Delay (MED) Time

In single-star evolution typical LTP/VLTPs occur at about a thousand to tens of thousands of years after the star has left the AGB (e.g., Iben et al. 1983; Blöcker 2001). In the case of a massive WD that is a remnant of a core-WD merger the timescale can be even shorter. I will return to this timescale in Section 4. Here I only point to the requirement of an MED.

The requirement that, at least some, progenitors of SNe Ia have an MED, i.e., a time delay from merger (or from a mass transfer event) to explosion comes from the observational findings that many SNe Ia have no close circumstellar matter(CSM; see review by Soker 2018) at explosion time, and that many SNe Ia have a more or less spherical explosion (see review by Soker 2019).

Studies have considered an MED of tens of years (e.g.,Neopane et al. 2022 for a recent paper on the DD scenario) to tens of thousands of years (e.g., Soker 2022 for a recent paper on the CD scenario).For the VLTP to have any role in the light curve of the SN, the LTP/VLTP cannot occur a long time before the explosion. The typical time of the LTP/VLTP after the AGB phase sets an upper limit on the MED of ≈105yr.Overall, for a pre-explosion LTP/VLTP to occur and play a role I require the MED time to be

Condition 2(Equation(2))does not impose a strong limit on pre-explosion LTP/VLTP if we consider that, crudely, ≈50%of SNe Ia might obey this condition (Soker 2022). It is Condition 1 (Equation (1)) that strongly constrains the number of pre-explosion LTP/VLTPs. I therefore turn to study the possibility of the merger remnant to retain some helium.

3. Retaining Low Helium Mass

3.1. The CD Scenario Versus the DD Scenario

Critical to the occurrence of an LTP/VLTP is that some helium survives the merger process. When two WDs merge in the DD scenario the helium, which one or two of them have,easily burns because of the high temperatures that the outer zones achieve(e.g.,Dan et al.2012;Pakmor et al.2013;Perets et al.2019;Pakmor et al.2021).Therefore,it is not clear at all whether any helium can survive the merger of two WDs. The answer will come from future three-dimensional (3D)simulations.

I therefore consider only the CD scenario where the merger takes place at the end of the common envelope evolution(CEE,Kashi&Soker 2011).In this case the helium on the outer zone of the core is already very hot,⋍108K. It is possible therefore that this helium is not compressed to high enough densities to be ignited.On the other hand,the violent merger process likely mixes helium with carbon, a mixture that burns more easily.Again, only 3D numerical simulations can determine whether some helium from the core survives the core-WD merger in the CD scenario. Therefore, I first consider the case where hydrogen and helium from the envelope survive.

3.2. Surviving Envelope Helium

To have a core-WD merger in the CD scenario the mass of the envelope of the AGB star at the time it engulfs the WD secondary should be MAGB,env≿3 M⊙(e.g.,Soker et al. 2013;Canals et al. 2018).

I use the Reimers mass loss rate(Reimers 1975)in the formM˙wind⋍ 3 × 10-13LM-1RM⊙yr-1,wherethestellar luminosity L, mass M and radius R are in solar units. I note that other expressions are also possible (e.g., Schröder &Cuntz 2007). For this mass loss rate, which is linear with the stellar luminosity, the ratio of the rate at which envelope burning adds helium to the core,M˙He, to the wind mass loss rate,M˙wind, is

where Mremis the mass of the merger remnant,and for the giant radius RgI take a moderate radius because the envelope mass is low. To retain a helium mass that allows an LTP/VLTP, i.e.,ΔMHe,TP≈0.01 M⊙(Equation (1)), the merger process should leave an envelope mass of

Kashi&Soker(2011)estimated that to facilitate a core-WD merger in the CD scenario a fraction of ηCBD⋍0.01−0.1 of the common envelope remains bound in a circumbinary disk at the end of the CEE. Here I require that either in addition to the circumbinary disk there is a low-mass envelope that survives the CEE, or that a fraction of the circumbinary disk remains bound after merger and it is inflated to form a low-mass envelope.

The conclusion is that to have an LTP/VLTP the merging process should leave about one per cent or more of the initial AGB envelope mass bound to the merger remnant.I expect that only a minority, if at all, of SN Ia progenitors in the CD scenario will leave such an envelope, but that nonetheless it is possible.

3.3. Surviving Core Helium

I here estimate that not enough helium to lead to an LTP/VLTP from the core survives the merger.

As I mentioned above (Section 3.1) it is not clear at all that the merger process leaves any helium from the core. In the core-WD merger process either the WD or the core stay intact,and the other object is tidally destroyed. The helium, being on the outer part of the core,is mixed with the CO of the destroyed object, being the WD or the core. Therefore, if the process leaves any helium, the helium is mixed with the carbon and oxygen in the outer parts of the merger remnants. At the outer regions the densities are too low for the pycnonuclear reactions that Chiosi et al. (2015) studied to take place. Chiosi et al.(2015) proposed an isolated sub-Chandrasekhar WD scenario for SNe Ia. In their scenario pycnonuclear reactions between carbon and tiny amounts of hydrogen or helium during the crystallization of the WD cause a combination of WD temperature and density that is sufficient to initiate carbon burning,i.e.,12C+12C and up to56Ni.It is the carbon burning that explodes the WD.

If some helium is mixed with the CO in the outer zone of the WD it diffuses out. I very crudely estimate the diffusion coefficient of helium through CO matter based on expression from,e.g.,Paquette et al.(1986)and Caplan et al.(2022),to beD≈0.1(T108K)32(ρ106g cm-1)-23cm2s-1. The helium is spread in a layer of width Δr ≈1000 km.The diffusion time will be therefore τdiff≈(Δr)2/D. For the above parameters,and since the WD cools over this long timescale,I estimate that τdiff>109yr.(I get the same crude timescales from scaling the tables that Koester 2009 give).By that time the WD has cooled.I conclude that if the helium mixture with carbon and oxygen in the hot WD merger remnant did not ignite the helium(but I do expect ignition of helium),the floating of helium on the surface of the WD is unlikely to ignite a VLTP.

4. Relevant Timescales

In single-star evolution an LTP (a post-AGB helium shell flash while hydrogen still burns) takes place hundreds to thousands of years after departure from the AGB (e.g.,Blöcker 2001). For a VLTP (when hydrogen burning has already ceased) the star needs to fade first to a luminosity of LVLTP≈few×100 L⊙along the WD cooling track (e.g., Iben et al.1983;Blöcker 2001).This implies that VLTPs take place tens of thousands of years after departure from the AGB, with longer timescales for more massive stars (e.g., Bloecker &Schoenberner 1990; Bloecker 1995, for evolutionary times on the WD cooling track). Overall, I crudely take the LTP/VLTP of the merger remnant to occur sometime in the post-AGB age of

This is the reason for condition 2(Equation(2)).I do note that the merger remnant is expected to be highly magnetized (e.g.,Pelisoli et al. 2022), and that magnetic fields might play a role in SN Ia progenitors in different scenarios (e.g., Ablimit &Maeda 2019). Future studies should examine the role of the high magnetic fields in the LTP/VLTPs.

For a surviving envelope mass of Mrem,env, and using the same mass loss rate as in Section 3.2 and for a remnant mass of Mrem=1.4 M⊙, the time from the merger event to the termination of the AGB by the merger remnant is

Another process that determines the post-merger evolution is angular momentum loss through the magnetic dipole radiation torque. This timescale might set the MED time in the CD scenario (e.g., Ilkov & Soker 2012) and in the DD scenario(e.g., Neopane et al. 2022). Several parameters determine the angular momentum loss timescale. Some of them are more secure, like the moment of inertia of the WD. Assuming that the merger remnant is rapidly rotating and has a mass of ⋍1.4 M⊙, there are two undetermined parameters that influence the angular momentum loss timescale the most.These are the dipole magnetic field of the remnant B, and the angle between the magnetic axis and the rotation axis of the WD remnant, δ. The angular momentum loss timescale dependence on these two parameters is (for more details see Ilkov & Soker 2012 and Neopane et al. 2022)

Note that Ilkov & Soker (2012) scale (their Equation (10)) by B=108G and bysinδ=0.1, while Neopane et al. (2022)scale (their Equation (10)) by B=1010G and bysinδ=1. If the angular momentum loss timescale determines the time to the WD explosion then tMED⋍τB.

If indeed condition 2 (Equation (2)) holds, then the explosion takes place before the nebula that the CEE (that leads to the merger)ejected disperses to the interstellar medium(ISM), although it might be at a large distance from the explosion. This nebula is a planetary nebula, as the WD remnant ionizes the nebula. The explosion of an SN inside a planetary nebula is termed SNIP. In Soker (2022) I crudely deduced by analyzing observations that SNIPs account for≈50% of all normal SNe Ia (i.e., not including peculiar SNe Ia).

5. The Rate of LPT/VLTP SNIPs

Equation (6) shows that if the merger remnant maintains enough envelope mass to experience a strong LTP/VLTP,then its envelope mass dictates that it stays an AGB star for Δtmer−AGB≈104yr after merger. In Soker (2022) I crudely estimated that about half of all SNe Ia are SNIPs that take place within a timescale of tSNIP≈104yr after the end of the CEE of the WD and the AGB star. The equality Δtmer−AGB≈tSNIPimplies that about half the merger remnants that maintain a large enough envelope mass to experience a helium shell flash will explode while the merger remnants are still AGB stars.This holds whether the helium shell flash ignites the carbon in the core or not. The carbon detonation explodes the star. The ignition might result from a last helium shell flash during this final AGB phase that ignites the carbon. Else, the loss of angular momentum might lead to the core explosion (see Section 6.1).

The outcome of an explosion of the core while there is a hydrogen-rich envelope of radius ≈100 R⊙and a mass of≈0.01 M⊙is a peculiar SN Ia if the hydrogen is not detected.It is peculiar because of the relatively massive envelope,which in turn might lead to an early flux excess(EFE)much higher than in normal SNe Ia with EFE (Section 6.3). If the hydrogen is detected, then it might at first be classified as a peculiar SN II.However,later analysis of the light curve will reveal extremely low hydrogen mass alongside a56Ni mass that is much larger than what typical SNe II have. This will point to a hydrogenpolluted peculiar SN Ia.

Because I am not aware of such peculiar SNe Ia or SNe II,I conclude that the number of cases,NTP,SN,where the WD-core merger remnant maintains a large enough envelope to stay an AGB and experiences a helium shell flash on the AGB(thermal pulse)or experiences an LTP/VLTP,is very rare,at most a few per cent of the number of all SNe Ia, NIs. Namely,

If and when such peculiar SNe are identified,we might be able to better constrain this fraction.

I emphasize again that the mass limit for LTP/VLTP of the massive merger remnant might be much smaller than what condition 1 (Equation (1)) gives. In that case the merger remnant stays a short time on the AGB, and even if explosion does take place during the AGB phase the effect of the very low mass envelope is small. Therefore, weak LTP/VLTPs,those that result from a very low helium mass of ΔMHe,TP≪10−2M⊙, might be more common. This should be explored in future studies.

6. Possible Consequences of LTP/VLTP

I speculate here on three possible consequences of an LTP/VLTP.As I stated in Section 4,because all explosions occur at a short time(≾105yr)after the AGB phase for the LTP/VLTP to play a role, all these SNe Ia are SNIPs, i.e., SNe Ia inside planetary nebulae.

6.1. Triggering WD Remnant Explosion

In single star evolution the WD mass does not reach a mass larger than about 1.1 M⊙. Calculations show that an LTP/VLTP does not ignite the WD (otherwise we would have a much larger number of SNe Ia than observed).By“igniting the WD”I refer to the ignition of carbon burning in the core that in turn explodes the WD. However, an LTP/VLTP on a merger remnant that is about the Chandrasekhar mass,Mrem⋍1.4 M⊙,might ignite the WD, similar to the ignition by a thin helium shell in some channels of the DDet scenario (e.g., Shen &Moore 2014). Shen & Moore (2014) find that a pure helium shell mass of ⋍few×0.001 M⊙can ignite a WD of mass≿1.3 M⊙. A small mixture of CO into the helium eases the ignition of helium. Since I take the helium mass to be ΔMHe,TP≿0.01 M⊙, which is condition 1 (Equation (1)), the LTP/VLTP might ignite the WD. During the LTP/VLTP the star is hydrogen-deficient with total hydrogen mass of≾10−5M⊙(e.g., Herwig et al. 1999), and so the explosion will be indeed classified as an SN Ia (or a peculiar SN Ia).

Previous studies of the CD scenario (e.g., Ilkov &Soker 2012) assume that the loss of angular momentum leads to the explosion of the Chandrasekhar-mass merger remnant,with a timescale as given by Equation (7). In addition to this possibility, I raise here the possibility that in rare cases(Equation (8)) LTP/VLTP ignites the WD.

Chandrasekhar-mass WDs that explode in the SD scenario by detonation alone, without deflagration to detonation transition, produce too much56Ni to be compatible with observations of normal SNe Ia.However,there are some super-Chandrasekhar-mass WDs that do have larger than usual56Ni masses(e.g.,Deb et al.2022;Dimitriadis et al.2022 for recent studies). Moreover, in a recent study Neopane et al. (2022)argue that a Chandrasekhar-mass merger product that explodes within a short time after merger, namely, a short MED time,might have a different density structure than a Chandrasekhar WD in the SD scenario (be more extended), and therefore has different properties at explosion. Specifically, Neopane et al.(2022) find that their calculated synthetic spectra of a merger product that explodes by detonation (with no deflagration to detonation transition) with tMED⋍100 yr in the DD scenario matches normal SN spectra.Future studies should examine the properties of detonation of Chandrasekhar-mass WDs with MED times of up to tEMD⋍104−105yr, and determine whether they produce normal or peculiar SNe Ia.

Yet another possibility is that an LTP/VLTP ignites sub-Chandrasekhar WD remnants,but these are more massive than what single-star evolution gives. Roy et al. (2022) find that helium detonation does not ignite a WD of ⋍1 M⊙in the DDet scenario. They further suggest that helium detonation might ignite the most massive CO WDs. Namely, LTP/LTP events,which are similar in many respects to helium detonation in the DDet scenario, might ignite WD merger remnants in the mass range of

Even in this case the WD needs to be more extended than a cold WD (as Neopane et al. 2022 find) to be a normal SN Ia,because cold WDs that explode in the DDet scenario have to be of mass ⋍1 M⊙to account for normal SNe Ia (e.g., Shen et al.2018).

6.2. WD Explosion Inside a Born-again AGB Star

Different simulations show that the born-again star can stay inflated,i.e.,R ≫1 R⊙(e.g.,Schoenberner 1979)for hundreds of years (e.g., Althaus et al. 2005; Guerrero et al. 2018;Lawlor 2021). However, more massive stars at the time of LTP/VLTP evolve faster (e.g., Bloecker 1995; Bloecker &Schoenberner 1997). On top of these, the time of evolution depends on the uncertain efficiency of convective mixing of elements (e.g., Herwig 2002; Althaus et al. 2005), and the evolution time seems to be short(e.g.,Herwig 2002;Lechner&Kimeswenger 2004),down to several years(e.g.,Clayton et al.2006). Overall, I scale the WD-inflated phase after an LTP/VLTP with a timescale of τBA≈100 yr,but it might be shorter even. This implies that only ≾1% of the SNe Ia that explode within 104−105yr from the termination of the AGB will take place inside a born-again envelope. With Equation (8) I conclude that the fraction of SNe Ia inside an inflated bornagain envelope is extremely low

The gas that the born-again AGB star ejects might be H-poor and He-poor (e.g., Montoro-Molina et al. 2022). The inflated envelope of the born-again star in these cases is H-poor and He-poor.However,calculations show that the inflated envelope can be H-rich and He-rich as well (e.g., Althaus et al. 2007).The envelope can be also He-rich and H-poor, as with V605 Aql,the central star of the planetary nebula A58(e.g.,Clayton et al. 2006).

An explosion inside the very low mass, ≈10−3M⊙, H-poor or H/He-poor envelope would still be classified as an SN Ia.However,the very hot thin envelope will cool in the first hours to days to give an EFE,similar to that when the ejecta collides with CSM (Section 6.3). The outcome is therefore an SN Ia with EFE in the frame of the CD scenario.

6.3. Explosion into Born-again Ejecta

A born-again star,which follows an LTP/VLTP becomes an AGB star again, ejects a mass of ≈10−4−10−3(but the mass can be even larger)in a clumpy morphology(e.g.,Jacoby et al.2020 for a discussion and references).Fang et al.(2014)model the born-again phase with a duration of 20 yr, a wind velocity of 20 km s−1and a mass loss rate of 10−4M⊙yr−1.Following these studies and others, I take typical ejecta of a born-again star to be clumpy (e.g., Kerber et al. 2009; Hinkle et al. 2020;Rodríguez-González et al. 2022), to contain a mass of ≈10−4–10−3M⊙and to expand at few×10 km s−1. However, for the inner and slowest parts of the ejecta I take a velocity of ⋍10 km s−1.

The born-again ejecta adds up to the planetary nebula shell and does not play a prominent additional role at late times.The born-again ejecta can lead to an EFE of the SN Ia only if the SN ejecta collides with the born-again ejecta in the first few days, before the SN Ia becomes bright by radioactive decay.The process is like the EFE that might result from the collision of the SN Ia ejecta with the CSM in some other SN Ia scenarios(e.g.,Raskin&Kasen 2013;Levanon et al.2015;Kromer et al.2016; Piro & Morozova 2016).

Overall, the fraction of systems that explode inside an extended born-again envelope or a decade after the star contracts back is about ≾1% of all cases with LTP/VLTP.These SNe Ia will have an EFE. However, Equations (10) and(11) imply that such systems can account for no more than a fraction of few×10−4of all SNe Ia.

7. Discussion and Summary

In this study I raise the (speculative) possibility that within the frame of the CD scenario (Section 1) in rare cases the merger process of the core and the WD maintains an envelope mass(Equation(4))that is sufficiently massive to cause a later helium shell flash. The helium shell flash might take place while the merger remnant is still on the AGB(Section 5),while the star moves to the left on the HR diagram as a post-AGB star(this is an LTP), or along the WD cooling tack (VLTP).

Although the merger remnant is massive, it is hot and more extended than a WD of the same mass that evolves as a single star or grows by slow mass accretion(Neopane et al.2022).In addition the merger remnant is rapidly rotating and sustains a strong magnetic field. Future studies should determine the helium mass that can drive LTP/VLTP on such complicated WD-core merger remnants. In this study I scaled the required helium mass for an LTP/VLTP as in Equation (1), but one should keep in mind that the required mass might be much smaller.

The sufficiently massive envelope according to condition 1(Equation (1)) implies that the merger remnant spends ≈104yr on the AGB(Equation(6)).I estimated that in the frame of the CD scenario the fraction of merger remnants that maintain sufficiently massive envelope to have an LTP/VLTP is at most a few per cent of all SNe Ia(Equation(8)).Otherwise there will be a too large number of WD explosions inside a thin AGB envelope. However, if the required helium mass is smaller because of the massive remnant,i.e.,ΔMHe,TP≪10−2M⊙(see discussion in Section 2.1 and 5),then the merger remnant stays on the AGB for a much shorter time and the effect of the very low mass envelope on the SN Ia light curve is small.Therefore,weak LTP/VLTP that results from these low mass helium shells might be more common.

In some cases,the WD merger remnant might explode while the merger remnant is still on the AGB; the outcome is a peculiar SN Ia if no hydrogen or helium is detected, or a speculative peculiar hydrogen-polluted SN Ia if hydrogen is detected (Section 5). If the WD merger-remnant explodes inside an inflated born-again star, or within <20 yr after the born-again star has contracted back, then the outcome is an EFE in the light curve of the SN Ia.The fraction of systems that might show an EFE due to this process is the combined rates of Equations (10) and (11), a fraction of <few×10−4of all SNe Ia.

In recent studies, Deckers et al. (2022) estimate that SNe Ia with EFE, such as SN 2015bq (Li et al. 2022), amount to⋍18%±11% of all SNe Ia at redshift of z <0.07, and Magee et al. (2022) estimate this fraction to be ⋍28%±11%. My conclusion is that the inflated envelope and mass ejection by LTP/VLTP events might at most account for a very small fraction of SNe Ia with EFE.

Deckers et al. (2022) also find that SNe Ia with EFE originate from younger stellar populations. This, and the EFE in some super-Chandrasekhar SNe Ia (e.g., SN 2020hvf; Jiang et al. 2021), might suggest that some EFE SNe Ia come from the CD scenario. The CD scenario can account for super-Chandrasekhar SNe Ia and can explain a short CEE to explosion delay time (tCEED; Soker 2022). Therefore, it is possible that the CD scenario might account for EFE in some SNe Ia, but not by LTP/VLTP. Either the EFE results from ejecta-CSM collision like in other SN Ia scenarios(e.g.,Raskin&Kasen 2013;Levanon et al.2015;Kromer et al.2016;Piro&Morozova 2016), or the explosion mixes56Ni to the outer regions of the SN ejecta as in some other SN Ia scenarios(e.g.,Piro&Morozova 2016;Jiang et al.2018).The CSM might be gas from the planetary nebula that falls back toward the remnant. The fallback process requires further study. In a very recent paper, Ashall et al. (2022) suggest that in some cases Doppler shift of high velocity gas can account for blue flux excess. This process is relevant also to the CD scenario.

The helium burning during the core-WD merger in the CD scenario, and in rare cases in an LTP/VLTP, produces via nucleosynthesis the radioactive isotope44Ti, like helium burning in the DDet scenario (e.g., Roy et al. 2022). In most SNe Ia according to the CD scenario, as I found above, LTP/VLTP does not take place.As well,most explosions take place more than a thousand years after merger. Because the radioactive isotope44Ti has a half-life of 60 yr I do not expect the presence of more44Ti than what the explosion by deflagration to detonation transition predicts (see comparison between models by, e.g., Troja et al. 2014). Recent studies suggest that most SNe Ia contain small masses of44Ti, as the deflagration to detonation transition predicts or less(e.g.,Lopez et al.2015;Weinberger et al.2020).In rare cases the explosion takes place hundreds of years after merger.Then there might be some extra44Ti.In these cases there is a close CSM because of the short delay from the CEE to explosion(short tCEED).In the very rare cases of LTP/VLTP that trigger an SN Ia or take place a short time before the SN Ia explosion,I expect to find a somewhat larger44Ti mass than what the deflagration to detonation transition predicts.

Despite the very low fraction of SNe Ia with pre-explosion LTP/VLTP, the large number of SNe Ia (thousands per year)that ongoing sky surveys will find in coming years might lead to about one case per year where LTP/VLTP might have an influence on the light curve.

Acknowledgment

I thank Robert Fisher for enlightening discussions and Marcelo M.Miller Bertolami,Yossef Zenati and an anonymous referee for useful comments. This research was supported by a grant from the Israel Science Foundation (769/20).