scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Non-spherical core collapse supernovae. I. Neutrino-driven convection, Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities, and the formation and propagation of metal clumps

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, a simulation of a type II explosion in a 15 M blue supergiant progenitor is presented, that confirms our earlier type II models and extends their validity to times as late as 5.5 hours after core bounce.
Abstract
We have performed two-dimensional simulations of core collapse supernovae that encompass shock revival by neutrino heating, neutrino-driven convection, explosive nucleosynthesis, the growth of Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities, and the propagation of newly formed metal clumps through the exploding star. A simulation of a type II explosion in a 15 M blue supergiant progenitor is presented, that confirms our earlier type II models and extends their validity to times as late as 5.5 hours after core bounce. We also study a type Ib-like explosion, by simply removing the hydrogen envelope of the progenitor model. This allows for a first comparison of type II and type Ib evolution. We present evidence that the hydrodynamics of core collapse supernovae beyond shock revival diers markedly from the results of simulations that have followed the Rayleigh-Taylor mixing starting from ad hoc energy deposition schemes to initiate the explosion. We find iron group elements to be synthesized in an anisotropic, dense, low-entropy shell that expands with velocities of17 000 km s 1 shortly after shock revival. The growth of Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities at the Si/ Oa nd (C+O)/He composition interfaces of the progenitor, seeded by the flow-structures resulting from neutrino-driven convection, leads to a fragmentation of this shell into metal-rich "clumps". This fragmentation starts already 20 s after core bounce and is complete within the first few minutes of the explosion. During this time the clumps are slowed down by drag, and by the positive pressure gradient in the unstable layers. However, at t 300 s they decouple from the flow and start to propagate ballistically and subsonically through the He core, with the maximum velocities of metals remaining constant at3500 5500 km s 1 . This early "clump decoupling" leads to significantly higher 56 Ni velocities at t= 300 s than in one-dimensional models of the explosion, demonstrating that multi-dimensional eects which are at work within the first minutes, and which have been neglected in previous studies (especially in those which dealt with the mixing in type II supernovae), are crucial. Despite comparably high initial maximum nickel velocities in both our type II and our type Ib-like model, we find that there are large dierences in the final maximum nickel velocities between both cases. In the "type Ib" model the maximum velocities of metals remain frozen in at3500 5500 km s 1 for t 300 s, while in the type II model they drop significantly for t > 1500 s. In the latter case, the massive hydrogen envelope of the progenitor forces the supernova shock to slow down strongly, leaving behind a reverse shock and a dense helium shell (or "wall") below the He/H interface. After penetrating into this dense material the metal-rich clumps possess supersonic speeds, before they are slowed down by drag forces to1200 km s 1 at a time of 20 000 s post-bounce. While, due to this deceleration, the maximum velocities of iron-group elements in SN 1987 A cannot be reproduced in case of the considered 15 M progenitor, the "type Ib" model is in fairly good agreement with observed clump velocities and the amount of mixing inferred for type Ib supernovae. Thus it appears promising for calculations of synthetic spectra and light curves. Furthermore, our simulations indicate that for type Ib explosions the pattern of clump formation in the ejecta is correlated with the structure of the convective pattern prevailing during the shock-revival phase. This might be used to deduce observational constraints for the dynamics during this early phase of the evolution, and the role of neutrino heating in initiating the explosion.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphorus in the Young Supernova Remnant Cassiopeia A

TL;DR: Near-infrared spectroscopic observations of the young SN remnant Cassiopeia A show that the abundance ratio of phosphorus to the major nucleosynthetic product iron in SN material is up to 100 times the average ratio of the Milky Way, confirming that phosphorus is produced in SNe.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gravitational Waves from Stellar Collapse: Correlations to Explosion Asymmetries

TL;DR: In this paper, a series of three-dimensional core-collapse simulations with asymmetries derived from initial perturbations caused by precollapse convection, core rotation, and low-mode convection in the explosion engine itself are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synthetic line and continuum linear-polarization signatures of axisymmetric Type II supernova ejecta

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented synthetic single-line and continuum linear-polarization signatures due to electron scattering in axially symmetric Type II supernovae (SNe) which they calculate using a Monte Carlo and a long characteristic radiative-transfer code.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nucleosynthesis-relevant conditions in neutrino-driven supernova outflows - II. The reverse shock in two-dimensional simulations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present two-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations with an approximate description of neutrino-transport effects, which for the first time follow the post-bounce accretion, onset of the explosion, wind formation, and the wind expansion through the collision with the preceding supernova ejecta.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gamma Rays from Single-Lobe Supernova Explosions

TL;DR: In this paper, a suite of simulations of single-lobe supernova explosions of a 15 M☉ red supergiant star is presented, focusing on the effect these asymmetries have on the gamma-ray emission and the mixing in the explosion.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Piecewise Parabolic Method (PPM) for Gas Dynamical Simulations

TL;DR: This work recognizes the need for additional dissipation in any higher-order Godunov method of this type, and introduces it in such a way so as not to degrade the quality of the results.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Evolution and Explosion of Massive Stars. II. Explosive Hydrodynamics and Nucleosynthesis

TL;DR: In this paper, the nucleosynthetic yield of isotopes lighter than A = 66 (zinc) is determined for a grid of stellar masses and metallicities including stars of 11, 12, 13, 15, 18, 19, 20, 22, 25, 30, 35, and 40 M{sub {circle_dot}} and metals Z = 0, 10{sup {minus}4}, 0.01, 0.1, and 1 times solar (a slightly reduced mass grid is employed for non-solar metallicities).
Journal ArticleDOI

Local adaptive mesh refinement for shock hydrodynamics

TL;DR: An automatic, adaptive mesh refinement strategy for solving hyperbolic conservation laws in two dimensions and how to organize the algorithm to minimize memory and CPU overhead is developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

On Godunov-type methods for gas dynamics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a new approximate Riemann solver for compressible gas flow, where a numerical approximation for the pressure and the velocity at t t is given.
Related Papers (5)