Core-Collapse Supernovae: Reflections and Directions
H.-Thomas Janka (1), Florian Hanke (1), Lorenz Huedepohl (1), Andreas, Marek (1), Bernhard Mueller (1), and Martin Obergaulinger (2) ((1) MPI for, Astrophysics, Garching, (2) Universitat de Valencia)

TL;DR
This paper reviews current understanding and recent advances in the physics of core-collapse supernovae, highlighting simulation results that improve predictions of explosion mechanisms and observable signals.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of recent simulation techniques, including 2D and 3D models, and discusses the roles of magnetic fields, neutrino transport, and instabilities in supernova explosions.
Findings
Successful neutrino-driven explosions achieved in 2D simulations.
Magnetic fields can promote explosions even without rotation.
Ongoing debate on the roles of SASI and neutrino-driven convection.
Abstract
Core-collapse supernovae are among the most fascinating phenomena in astrophysics and provide a formidable challenge for theoretical investigation. They mark the spectacular end of the lives of massive stars and, in an explosive eruption, release as much energy as the sun produces during its whole life. A better understanding of the astrophysical role of supernovae as birth sites of neutron stars, black holes, and heavy chemical elements, and more reliable predictions of the observable signals from stellar death events are tightly linked to the solution of the long-standing puzzle how collapsing stars achieve to explode. In this article our current knowledge of the processes that contribute to the success of the explosion mechanism are concisely reviewed. After a short overview of the sequence of stages of stellar core-collapse events, the general properties of the progenitor-dependent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Neutrino Physics Research
