Back to Search Start Over

The impact of effective matter mixing based on three-dimensional hydrodynamical models on the molecule formation in the ejecta of SN 1987A

Authors :
Ono, Masaomi
Nozawa, Takaya
Nagataki, Shigehiro
Kozyreva, Alexandra
Orlando, Salvatore
Miceli, Marco
Chen, Ke-Jung
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

To investigate the impact of matter mixing on the formation of molecules in the ejecta of SN 1987A, time-dependent rate equations for chemical reactions are solved for one-zone and one-dimensional ejecta models of SN 1987A. The latter models are based on the one-dimensional profiles obtained by angle-averaging of the three-dimensional hydrodynamical models (Ono et al. 2020), which effectively reflect the 3D matter mixing; the impact is demonstrated, for the first time, based on three-dimensional hydrodynamical models. The distributions of initial seed atoms and radioactive $^{56}$Ni influenced by the mixing could affect the formation of molecules. By comparing the calculations for spherical cases and for several specified directions in the bipolar-like explosions in the three-dimensional hydrodynamical models, the impact is discussed. The decay of $^{56}$Ni, practically $^{56}$Co at later phases, could heat the gas and delay the molecule formation. Additionally, Compton electrons produced by the decay could ionize atoms and molecules and could destruct molecules. Several chemical reactions involved with ions such as H$^+$ and He$^+$ could also destruct molecules. The mixing of $^{56}$Ni plays a non-negligible role in both the formation and destruction of molecules through the processes above. The destructive processes of carbon monoxide and silicon monoxide due to the decay of $^{56}$Ni generally reduce the amounts. However, if the molecule formation is sufficiently delayed under a certain condition, the decay of $^{56}$Ni could locally increase the amounts through a sequence of reactions.<br />Comment: 85 pages, 32 figures, 8 tables; accepted for publication in ApJS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2305.02550
Document Type :
Working Paper