The spin rate of pre-collapse stellar cores: wave-driven angular momentum transport in massive stars
Jim Fuller, Matteo Cantiello, Daniel Lecoanet, Eliot Quataert

TL;DR
This paper investigates how internal gravity waves influence the rotation rates of pre-supernova stellar cores, revealing they can both spin down and spin up the core, affecting neutron star birth spins.
Contribution
It introduces a model showing IGW-driven angular momentum transport significantly impacts core rotation, providing new insights into neutron star initial spin periods.
Findings
IGW can spin down the core to periods >30 s
Maximum core rotation periods estimated at ~5000 s
Neutron star birth spin periods may be up to 500 ms
Abstract
The core rotation rates of massive stars have a substantial impact on the nature of core-collapse supernovae and their compact remnants. We demonstrate that internal gravity waves (IGW), excited via envelope convection during a red supergiant phase or during vigorous late time burning phases, can have a significant impact on the rotation rate of the pre-SN core. In typical () supernova progenitors, IGW may substantially spin down the core, leading to iron core rotation periods . Angular momentum (AM) conservation during the supernova would entail minimum NS rotation periods of . In most cases, the combined effects of magnetic torques and IGW AM transport likely lead to substantially longer rotation periods. However, the stochastic influx of AM delivered by IGW…
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