Molecules and dust in Cas A: I - Synthesis in the supernova phase and processing by the reverse shock in the clumpy remnant
Chiara Biscaro, Isabelle Cherchneff

TL;DR
This study models the chemical processes in Cas A supernova remnant, revealing that dense ejecta clumps are necessary for dust formation, but dust clusters are destroyed by reverse shocks, making in-situ dust synthesis unlikely.
Contribution
It provides a detailed chemical network model showing the impact of density and shocks on dust and molecule formation in supernova remnants.
Findings
Type IIb supernova ejecta form less dust than Type II-P due to lower density.
Dense clumps are required to match observed dust compositions.
Reverse shocks destroy dust clusters, preventing in-situ dust formation.
Abstract
Aims: We study the chemistry of the Type IIb supernova ejecta that led to the Cas A supernova remnant to assess the chemical type and quantity of dust that forms and evolves in the remnant phase. We later model a dense oxygen-rich ejecta knot that is crossed by the reverse shock in Cas A to study the evolution of the clump gas phase and the possibility to reform dust clusters in the post-reverse shock gas. Methods: A chemical network including all processes efficient at high gas temperatures and densities is considered. The formation of key bimolecular species (CO, SiO) and dust clusters is described. Stiff, coupled, ordinary, differential equations are solved for the conditions pertaining to both the SN ejecta and the post-reverse shock gas. Results: We find that the ejecta of Type IIb SNe are unable to form large amounts of molecules and dust clusters as opposed to their Type II-P…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
