Exploring the QCD phase transition in core collapse supernova simulations in spherical symmetry
T. Fischer, I. Sagert, M. Hempel, G. Pagliara, J. Schaffner-Bielich,, A. Mezzacappa, F.-K. Thielemann, M. Liebendorfer

TL;DR
This paper investigates the QCD phase transition in core collapse supernovae using simulations with a constructed equation of state, revealing a shock wave and neutrino burst associated with the transition.
Contribution
It introduces a new equation of state for strange quark matter in supernova simulations and demonstrates the dynamical effects of the QCD phase transition.
Findings
Phase transition triggers shock wave formation.
Shock wave accelerates and emits neutrino burst.
Softening and stiffening of EoS influence supernova dynamics.
Abstract
For finite chemical potential effective models of QCD predict a first order phase transition. In favour for the search of such a phase transition in nature, we construct an equation of state for strange quark matter based on the MIT bag model. We apply this equation of state to highly asymmetric core collapse supernova matter with finite temperatures and large baryon densities. The phase transition is constructed using the general Gibbs conditions, which results in an extended coexistence region between the pure hadronic and pure quark phases in the phase diagram, i.e. the mixed phase. The supernovae are simulated via general relativistic radiation hydrodynamics based on three flavor Boltzmann neutrino transport in spherical symmetry. During the dynamical evolution temperatures above 10 MeV, baryon densities above nuclear saturation density and a proton-to-baryon ratio below 0.2 are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · High-Energy Particle Collisions Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
