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Main Authors: Vathachira, Irin Babu, Hillman, Yael, Kashi, Amit
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.14596
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author Vathachira, Irin Babu
Hillman, Yael
Kashi, Amit
author_facet Vathachira, Irin Babu
Hillman, Yael
Kashi, Amit
contents We investigate the impact of the Bondi--Hoyle--Lyttleton (BHL) accretion mechanism on the evolution of nova eruptions in symbiotic systems by systematically varying three key input parameters: the initial donor (asymptotic giant branch; AGB) mass, the initial white dwarf (WD) mass, and the initial binary separation ($a$). We explore models with AGB masses in the range $1.5$--$3.5\,{\rm M_{\odot}}$, WD masses in the range $0.7$--$1.25\,{\rm M_{\odot}}$, and separations in the range $1$--$8\,{\rm kR_{\odot}}$. We find that all models exhibit a significant long-term orbital increase. This trend is primarily driven by the fact that approximately $99\%$ of the AGB mass is lost from the system, either directly via a wind that is not accreted by the WD, or accreted onto the WD and subsequently ejected during nova eruptions. As a result, the secular orbital response to mass loss or mass transfer dominates over angular-momentum-loss sinks that could otherwise shrink the orbit, producing a consistent orbital widening. Consequently, all WD masses gradually decrease with time. More massive WDs achieve higher mass-transfer efficiencies and accretion rates, leading to slightly higher mass-retention efficiencies per nova. However, because higher accretion rates also produce more frequent eruptions, the total WD mass lost over the AGB lifetime is larger in these systems. We conclude that symbiotic systems transferring mass via the BHL mechanism are unlikely to be viable progenitors of Type Ia supernovae.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2511_14596
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Role of Binary Configuration in Shaping Nova Evolution via Wind Accretion in Symbiotic Systems
Vathachira, Irin Babu
Hillman, Yael
Kashi, Amit
Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
We investigate the impact of the Bondi--Hoyle--Lyttleton (BHL) accretion mechanism on the evolution of nova eruptions in symbiotic systems by systematically varying three key input parameters: the initial donor (asymptotic giant branch; AGB) mass, the initial white dwarf (WD) mass, and the initial binary separation ($a$). We explore models with AGB masses in the range $1.5$--$3.5\,{\rm M_{\odot}}$, WD masses in the range $0.7$--$1.25\,{\rm M_{\odot}}$, and separations in the range $1$--$8\,{\rm kR_{\odot}}$. We find that all models exhibit a significant long-term orbital increase. This trend is primarily driven by the fact that approximately $99\%$ of the AGB mass is lost from the system, either directly via a wind that is not accreted by the WD, or accreted onto the WD and subsequently ejected during nova eruptions. As a result, the secular orbital response to mass loss or mass transfer dominates over angular-momentum-loss sinks that could otherwise shrink the orbit, producing a consistent orbital widening. Consequently, all WD masses gradually decrease with time. More massive WDs achieve higher mass-transfer efficiencies and accretion rates, leading to slightly higher mass-retention efficiencies per nova. However, because higher accretion rates also produce more frequent eruptions, the total WD mass lost over the AGB lifetime is larger in these systems. We conclude that symbiotic systems transferring mass via the BHL mechanism are unlikely to be viable progenitors of Type Ia supernovae.
title The Role of Binary Configuration in Shaping Nova Evolution via Wind Accretion in Symbiotic Systems
topic Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.14596