Relic proto-stellar disks and the origin of luminous circumstellar interaction in core collapse supernovae
Brian D. Metzger (Princeton University)

TL;DR
This paper explores the hypothesis that relic proto-stellar disks around massive stars could be the source of the substantial circumstellar matter observed in some core collapse supernovae, potentially powering their extreme luminosity.
Contribution
It introduces a model for the evolution of proto-stellar disks around massive stars and assesses their survival as relics capable of influencing supernova interactions.
Findings
Massive disks (~1-10 M_sun) can survive around the most massive stars.
Survival reasons include short stellar lifetimes and large photo-evaporation radii.
Relic disks could explain the observed circumstellar matter in luminous supernovae.
Abstract
A small fraction of core collapse supernovae (SNe) show evidence that the outgoing blast wave has encountered a substantial mass ~ 1-10 M_sun of circumstellar matter (CSM) at radii ~100-1000 AU, much more than can nominally be explained by pre-explosion stellar winds. In extreme cases this interaction may power the most luminous, optically-energetic SNe yet discovered. Interpretations for the origin of the CSM have thus far centered on explosive eruptions from the star just ~ years to decades prior to the core collapse. Here we consider an alternative possibility that the inferred CSM is a relic disk left over from stellar birth. We investigate this hypothesis by calculating the evolution of proto-stellar disks around massive stars following their early embedded phase using a self-similar accretion model. We identify an initial gravitationally-unstable ("gravito-turbulent") phase,…
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