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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Is strong sasi activity the key to successful neutrino-driven supernova explosions?

TLDR
In this article, the authors explore the viability of the neutrino-heating explosion mechanism's dependence on the spatial dimension and find that the average entropy of matter in the gain layer hardly depends on the dimension and thus is not a good diagnostic quantity for the readiness to explode.
Abstract
Following a simulation approach of recent publications, we explore the viability of the neutrino-heating explosion mechanism's dependence on the spatial dimension. Our results disagree with previous findings. While we also observe that two-dimensional (2D) models explode for lower driving neutrino luminosity than spherically symmetric (1D) models, we do not find that explosions in 3D occur easier and earlier than in 2D. Moreover, we find that the average entropy of matter in the gain layer hardly depends on the dimension and thus is not a good diagnostic quantity for the readiness to explode. Instead, mass, integrated entropy, total neutrino-heating rate, and non-radial kinetic energy in the gain layer are higher when models are closer to explosion. Coherent, large-scale mass motions as typically associated with the standing accretion-shock instability (SASI) are observed to be supportive for explosions because they drive strong shock expansion and thus enlarge the gain layer. While 2D models with better angular resolution clearly explode more easily, the opposite trend is seen in 3D. We interpret this as a consequence of the turbulent energy cascade, which transports energy from small to large spatial scales in 2D, thus fostering SASI activity. In contrast, the energy flow in 3D is in the opposite direction, feeding fragmentation and vortex motions on smaller scales and thus making the 3D evolution with finer grid resolution more similar to 1D. More favorable conditions for explosions in 3D may therefore be tightly linked to efficient growth of low-order SASI modes including nonaxisymmetric ones.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Core-Collapse Supernovae from 9 to 120 Solar Masses Based on Neutrino-powered Explosions

TL;DR: In this paper, a grid of supernovae resulting from massive stars with solar metallicity and masses from 9.0 to 120 solar masses are calculated for nucleosynthesis, light curves, explosion energies, and remnant masses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Progenitor-explosion connection and remnant birth masses for neutrino-driven supernovae of iron-core progenitors

TL;DR: In this article, a hydrodynamic supernova (SN) simulation was performed in spherical symmetry for over 100 single stars of solar metallicity to explore the proggenitor-explosion and progenitor-remnant connections established by the neutrino-driven mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Progenitor-Explosion Connection and Remnant Birth Masses for Neutrino-Driven Supernovae of Iron-Core Progenitors

TL;DR: In this paper, a neutrino-driven supernova was simulated in spherical symmetry for over 100 single stars of solar metallicity to explore the proggenitor-explosion and progenitor-remnant connections established by the neutrinos-driven mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perspectives on Core-Collapse Supernova Theory

TL;DR: Core collapse theory brings together many facets of high energy and nuclear astrophysics and the numerical arts to present theorists with one of the most important, yet frustrating, astronomical questions: "What is the mechanism of core-collapse supernova explosions?" A review of all the physics and the fifty-year history involved would soon bury the reader in minutiae that could easily obscure the essential elements of the phenomenon, as we understand it today as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Colloquium : Perspectives on core-collapse supernova theory

TL;DR: Core collapse theory brings together many facets of high energy and nuclear astrophysics and the numerical arts to present theorists with one of the most important, yet frustrating, astronomical questions: ''What is the mechanism of core-collapse supernova explosions?'' A review of all the physics and the 50-year history involved would soon bury the reader in minutiae that could easily obscure the essential elements of the phenomenon, as we understand it today as discussed by the authors.
References
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