Correlated Gravitational Wave and Neutrino Signals from General-Relativistic Rapidly Rotating Iron Core Collapse
C. D. Ott (1), E. Abdikamalov (1), E. O'Connor (1), C. Reisswig (1),, R. Haas (1), P. Kalmus (1), S. Drasco (2,1), A. Burrows (3), E. Schnetter (4), ((1) Caltech, (2) Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, (3) Princeton, (4) Perimeter, Institute)

TL;DR
This study uses 3D general-relativistic simulations to analyze how rapid rotation in collapsing stellar cores influences gravitational wave and neutrino signals, revealing potential observational signatures of core rotation in supernovae.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of GW and neutrino signals from 3D simulations of rapidly rotating core collapse, highlighting the effects of rotation and neutrino leakage.
Findings
GW signals are largely independent of progenitor mass and structure.
Neutrino leakage significantly affects GW signals only in slow or non-rotating models.
Rapid rotation excites protoneutron star oscillations detectable in GW and neutrino signals.
Abstract
We present results from a new set of 3D general-relativistic hydrodynamic simulations of rotating iron core collapse. We assume octant symmetry and focus on axisymmetric collapse, bounce, the early postbounce evolution, and the associated gravitational wave (GW) and neutrino signals. We employ a finite-temperature nuclear equation of state, parameterized electron capture in the collapse phase, and a multi-species neutrino leakage scheme after bounce. The latter captures the important effects of deleptonization, neutrino cooling and heating and enables approximate predictions for the neutrino luminosities in the early evolution after core bounce. We consider 12-solar-mass and 40-solar-mass presupernova models and systematically study the effects of (i) rotation, (ii) progenitor structure, and (iii) postbounce neutrino leakage on dynamics, GW, and, neutrino signals. We demonstrate, that…
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