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Explosion Mechanisms of Core-Collapse Supernovae

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TLDR
The neutrino-heating mechanism, aided by nonradial flows, drives explosions, albeit low-energy ones, of ONeMg-core and some Fe-core progenitors as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
Supernova theory, numerical and analytic, has made remarkable progress in the past decade. This progress was made possible by more sophisticated simulation tools, especially for neutrino transport, improved microphysics, and deeper insights into the role of hydrodynamic instabilities. Violent, large-scale nonradial mass motions are generic in supernova cores. The neutrino-heating mechanism, aided by nonradial flows, drives explosions, albeit low-energy ones, of ONeMg-core and some Fe-core progenitors. The characteristics of the neutrino emission from new-born neutron stars were revised, new features of the gravitational-wave signals were discovered, our notion of supernova nucleosynthesis was shattered, and our understanding of pulsar kicks and explosion asymmetries was significantly improved. But simulations also suggest that neutrino-powered explosions might not explain the most energetic supernovae and hypernovae, which seem to demand magnetorotational driving. Now that modeling is being advanced from two to three dimensions, more realism, new perspectives, and hopefully answers to long-standing questions are coming into reach.

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Interactions between ultra-high-energy particles and protogalactic environments

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the interactions of energetic hadronic particles (cosmic ray protons) with photons and baryons in protogalactic environments, where the target photons are supplied by the first generations of stars to form in the galaxy and the cosmological microwave background, while the target Baryons are the interstellar and circumgalactic medium.
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Neutrino spin oscillations in matter under the influence of gravitational and electromagnetic fields

TL;DR: In this paper, a quasi-classical equation for the description of the spin evolution of a neutrino propagating in a curved space-time and interacting with a background matter and an external electromagnetic field is derived.
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Expected impact from weak reactions with light nuclei in core-collapse supernova simulations

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of light nuclear clusters in simulations of core-collapse supernovae was studied and the reaction rates were developed for a large selection of charged current absorption and scattering processes with light clusters.
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Spectral classification of gravitational-wave emission and equation of state constraints in binary neutron star mergers

TL;DR: The first detection of gravitational waves from a binary neutron star merger (GW170817) and the accompanying electromagnetic emission has impressively advanced our understanding of the merger process and has set some first constraints on the macroscopic properties of neutron stars, with direct implications for the high-density equation of state as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hyper-Accreting Black Holes and Gamma-Ray Bursts

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a numerical model for relativistic disk accretion to study steady-state accretion at high rates of gamma-ray burst (GRB) and found that neutrino annihilation in hyper-accreting black hole systems can explain bursts up to 10**52 erg.
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A `Hypernova' model for SN 1998bw associated with gamma-ray burst of 25 April 1998

TL;DR: The discovery of the peculiar supernova (SN) 1998bw and its possible association with the gamma-ray burst (GRB) 980425$ 1,2,3} provides new clues to the understanding of the explosion mechanism of very massive stars and to the origin of some classes of gamma ray bursts.
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SN 2006gy: Discovery of the most luminous supernova ever recorded, powered by the death of an extremely massive star like Eta Carinae

TL;DR: The most luminous supernova ever recorded was SN2006gy as discussed by the authors, which reached a peak magnitude of -22 and had a total radiated energy of 1e51 erg.
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Presupernova Evolution of Differentially Rotating Massive Stars Including Magnetic Fields

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the first stellar evolution calculations to follow the evolution of rotating massive stars including, at least approximately, all these effects, magnetic and non-magnetic, from the zero-age main sequence until the onset of iron core collapse.
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