Supernova 1987A: neutrino-driven explosions in three dimensions and light curves
Victor Utrobin (1,2), Annop Wongwathanarat (1,3), H.-Thomas Janka (1),, and Ewald Mueller (1) ((1) MPI Astrophysics, Garching, (2) ITEP, Moscow, (3), RIKEN, Tokyo)

TL;DR
This study uses 3D neutrino-driven explosion simulations of blue supergiant stars to analyze their light curves and compare with SN 1987A observations, highlighting successes and limitations in modeling early light curves and progenitor structures.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed 3D neutrino-driven explosion models of SN 1987A's progenitors, linking explosion dynamics with observed light curve features.
Findings
Models reproduce 56Ni mass and velocities consistent with observations.
Inward hydrogen mixing matches spectral data.
Outer layer structures do not fit early light curve peaks.
Abstract
The well-studied type IIP SN 1987A, produced by the explosion of a blue supergiant (BSG) star, is a touchstone for massive-star evolution, simulations of neutrino-driven explosions, and modeling of light curves and spectra. In the framework of the neutrino-driven mechanism, we study the dependence of explosion properties on the structure of four different BSGs and compare the corresponding light curves with observations of SN 1987A. We perform 3D simulations with the PROMETHEUS code until about one day and map the results to the 1D code CRAB for the light curve calculations. All of our 3D models with explosion energies compatible with SN 1987A produce 56Ni in rough agreement with the amount deduced from fitting the radioactively powered light-curve tail. One of the progenitors yields maximum velocities of ~3000 km/s for the bulk of ejected 56Ni, consistent with observations. In all of…
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