The Landscape of the Neutrino Mechanism of Core-Collapse Supernovae: Neutron Star and Black Hole Mass Functions, Explosion Energies and Nickel Yields
Ondrej Pejcha, Todd A. Thompson

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the neutrino mechanism influences supernova outcomes, including neutron star and black hole masses, explosion energies, and nickel yields, by modeling progenitors across metallicities and mapping their observable signatures.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive mapping of progenitor properties to supernova observables, highlighting the complex interplay and predicting distributions of remnant masses and explosion characteristics.
Findings
Progenitors with 15, 19, and 21-26 M_Sun are most likely to form black holes.
Black hole formation probability increases at low metallicity.
Successful explosions are more frequent than 35%, based on observed neutron star masses.
Abstract
If the neutrino luminosity from the proto-neutron star formed during a massive star core collapse exceeds a critical threshold, a supernova (SN) results. Using spherical quasi-static evolutionary sequences for hundreds of progenitors over a range of metallicities, we study how the explosion threshold maps onto observables, including the fraction of successful explosions, the neutron star (NS) and black hole (BH) mass functions, the explosion energies (E_SN) and nickel yields (M_Ni), and their mutual correlations. Successful explosions are intertwined with failures in a complex pattern that is not simply related to initial progenitor mass or compactness. We predict that progenitors with initial masses of 15 +/- 1, 19 +/- 1, and 21-26 M_Sun are most likely to form BHs, that the BH formation probability is non-zero at solar-metallicity and increases significantly at low metallicity, and…
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