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Pushing 1D CCSNe to explosions: model and SN 1987A

Authors :
Perego, A.
Hempel, M.
Fröhlich, C.
Ebinger, K.
Eichler, M.
Casanova, J.
Liebendoerfer, M.
Thielemann, F. -K.
Source :
Astrophys. J. 806, 275 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

We report on a method, PUSH, for triggering core-collapse supernova explosions of massive stars in spherical symmetry. We explore basic explosion properties and calibrate PUSH such that the observables of SN1987A are reproduced. Our simulations are based on the general relativistic hydrodynamics code AGILE combined with the detailed neutrino transport scheme IDSA for electron neutrinos and ALS for the muon and tau neutrinos. To trigger explosions in the otherwise non-exploding simulations, we rely on the neutrino-driven mechanism. The PUSH method locally increases the energy deposition in the gain region through energy deposition by the heavy neutrino flavors. Our setup allows us to model the explosion for several seconds after core bounce. We explore the progenitor range 18-21M$_{\odot}$. Our studies reveal a distinction between high compactness (HC) and low compactness (LC) progenitor models, where LC models tend to explore earlier, with a lower explosion energy, and with a lower remnant mass. HC models are needed to obtain explosion energies around 1 Bethe, as observed for SN1987A. However, all the models with sufficiently high explosion energy overproduce $^{56}$Ni. We conclude that fallback is needed to reproduce the observed nucleosynthesis yields. The nucleosynthesis yields of $^{57-58}$Ni depend sensitively on the electron fraction and on the location of the mass cut with respect to the initial shell structure of the progenitor star. We identify a progenitor and a suitable set of PUSH parameters that fit the explosion properties of SN1987A when assuming 0.1M$_{\odot}$ of fallback. We predict a neutron star with a gravitational mass of 1.50M$_{\odot}$. We find correlations between explosion properties and the compactness of the progenitor model in the explored progenitors. However, a more complete analysis will require the exploration of a larger set of progenitors with PUSH.<br />Comment: revised version as accepted by ApJ (results unchanged, text modified for clarification, a few references added); 26 pages, 20 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Astrophys. J. 806, 275 (2015)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1501.02845
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/806/2/275