Simulations of Accretion Powered Supernovae in the Progenitors of Gamma Ray Bursts
Christopher C. Lindner, Milos Milosavljevic, Rongfeng Shen, Pawan, Kumar

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic simulations to explore how accretion energy can power Type Ic supernovae in gamma-ray burst progenitors, revealing conditions that lead to energetic explosions and unbound stellar material.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation approach for accretion-powered supernovae in LGRB progenitors, highlighting the role of convection and viscosity in explosion dynamics.
Findings
Explosions with energies ~5x10^50 ergs are possible.
Shock velocities around 3000 km/s can be achieved.
Unbound mass exceeds 6 solar masses in certain conditions.
Abstract
Observational evidence suggests a link between long duration gamma ray bursts (LGRBs) and Type Ic supernovae. Here, we propose a potential mechanism for Type Ic supernovae in LGRB progenitors powered solely by accretion energy. We present spherically-symmetric hydrodynamic simulations of the long-term accretion of a rotating gamma-ray burst progenitor star, a "collapsar," onto the central compact object, which we take to be a black hole. The simulations were carried out with the adaptive mesh refinement code FLASH in one spatial dimension and with rotation, an explicit shear viscosity, and convection in the mixing length theory approximation. Once the accretion flow becomes rotationally supported outside of the black hole, an accretion shock forms and traverses the stellar envelope. Energy is carried from the central geometrically thick accretion disk to the stellar envelope by…
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