Towards Realistic Progenitors of Core-Collapse Supernovae
W. David Arnett, Casey Meakin

TL;DR
This paper presents 2D hydrodynamical simulations of a 23 solar mass star's core-collapse progenitor, revealing complex asymmetries and dynamics that challenge traditional 1D models and have significant implications for supernova understanding.
Contribution
It demonstrates that 2D simulations capture more realistic and dynamic pre-supernova behavior than 1D models, highlighting the importance of multidimensional effects in stellar evolution.
Findings
Pronounced asymmetries and shell interactions in 2D simulations.
Large deviations from spherical symmetry in burning shells.
Chaotic turbulence behavior not captured by linear analysis.
Abstract
Two-dimensional (2D) hydrodynamical simulations of progenitor evolution of a 23 solar mass star, close to core collapse (about 1 hour, in 1D), with simultaneously active C, Ne, O, and Si burning shells, are presented and contrasted to existing 1D models (which are forced to be quasi-static). Pronounced asymmetries, and strong dynamical interactions between shells are seen in 2D. Although instigated by turbulence, the dynamic behavior proceeds to sufficiently large amplitudes that it couples to the nuclear burning. Dramatic growth of low order modes is seen, as well as large deviations from spherical symmetry in the burning shells. The vigorous dynamics is more violent than that seen in earlier burning stages in the 3D simulations of a single cell in the oxygen burning shell, or in 2D simulations not including an active Si shell. Linear perturbative analysis does not capture the chaotic…
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