Dynamics of a Spherical Accretion Shock with Neutrino Heating and Alpha-Particle Recombination
Rodrigo Fern\'andez (University of Toronto), Christopher Thompson, (CITA)

TL;DR
This study explores how neutrino heating and alpha-particle recombination influence the shock dynamics in core-collapse supernovae, revealing the conditions for explosion and the importance of multi-dimensional effects.
Contribution
It presents new hydrodynamic simulations that incorporate neutrino heating and nuclear statistical equilibrium, analyzing their impact on shock stability and explosion criteria.
Findings
Higher neutrino heating rates promote shock revival.
2D simulations require less heating for explosion than 1D.
Shock deformation is driven by non-spherical plumes and convection.
Abstract
We investigate the effects of neutrino heating and alpha-particle recombination on the hydrodynamics of core-collapse supernovae. Our focus is on the non-linear dynamics of the shock wave that forms in the collapse, and the assembly of positive energy material below it. To this end, we perform time-dependent hydrodynamic simulations with FLASH2.5 in spherical and axial symmetry. These generalize our previous calculations by allowing for bulk neutrino heating and for nuclear statistical equilibrium between n, p and alpha. The heating rate is freely tunable, as is the starting radius of the shock relative to the recombination radius of alpha-particles. An explosion in spherical symmetry involves the excitation of an overstable mode, which may be viewed as the L=0 version of the `Standing Accretion Shock Instability'. In 2D simulations, non-spherical deformations of the shock are driven by…
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