Pushing 1D CCSNe to explosions: model and SN 1987A
A. Perego, M. Hempel, C. Fr\"ohlich, K. Ebinger, M. Eichler, J., Casanova, M. Liebendoerfer, F.-K. Thielemann

TL;DR
This paper introduces the PUSH method to trigger core-collapse supernova explosions in spherical symmetry, calibrates it to reproduce SN1987A observables, and explores progenitor variations and nucleosynthesis outcomes.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel neutrino-driven explosion mechanism, PUSH, enabling spherical models to simulate supernova explosions consistent with SN1987A.
Findings
High compactness progenitors produce higher explosion energies.
Fallback is necessary to match observed nucleosynthesis yields.
Explosion energies correlate with progenitor compactness.
Abstract
We report on a method, PUSH, for triggering core-collapse supernova explosions of massive stars in spherical symmetry. We explore basic explosion properties and calibrate PUSH such that the observables of SN1987A are reproduced. Our simulations are based on the general relativistic hydrodynamics code AGILE combined with the detailed neutrino transport scheme IDSA for electron neutrinos and ALS for the muon and tau neutrinos. To trigger explosions in the otherwise non-exploding simulations, we rely on the neutrino-driven mechanism. The PUSH method locally increases the energy deposition in the gain region through energy deposition by the heavy neutrino flavors. Our setup allows us to model the explosion for several seconds after core bounce. We explore the progenitor range 18-21M. Our studies reveal a distinction between high compactness (HC) and low compactness (LC) progenitor…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Neutrino Physics Research
