General-Relativistic Simulations of Three-Dimensional Core-Collapse Supernovae
C. D. Ott (1), E. Abdikamalov (1), P. Moesta (1), R. Haas (1), S., Drasco (1,2), E. O'Connor (3), C. Reisswig (1), C. Meakin (4), E., Schnetter (5) ((1) TAPIR, Caltech, (2) Grinnell College, (3) CITA, (4), Theoretical Division, LANL, (5) Perimeter Institute)

TL;DR
This paper presents 3D general-relativistic simulations of core-collapse supernovae, highlighting the dominance of neutrino-driven convection over SASI and analyzing gravitational wave signals to probe post-bounce dynamics.
Contribution
First 3D general-relativistic simulations showing neutrino-driven convection as the dominant instability in supernova explosions.
Findings
Neutrino-driven convection becomes dominant in 3D simulations.
Large-scale aspherical shock deformations result from convection.
Gravitational wave signals can probe post-bounce hydrodynamics.
Abstract
We study the three-dimensional (3D) hydrodynamics of the post-core-bounce phase of the collapse of a 27-solar-mass star and pay special attention to the development of the standing accretion shock instability (SASI) and neutrino-driven convection. To this end, we perform 3D general-relativistic simulations with a 3-species neutrino leakage scheme. The leakage scheme captures the essential aspects of neutrino cooling, heating, and lepton number exchange as predicted by radiation-hydrodynamics simulations. The 27-solar-mass progenitor was studied in 2D by B. Mueller et al. (ApJ 761:72, 2012), who observed strong growth of the SASI while neutrino-driven convection was suppressed. In our 3D simulations, neutrino-driven convection grows from numerical perturbations imposed by our Cartesian grid. It becomes the dominant instability and leads to large-scale non-oscillatory deformations of the…
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