The Evolution and Impacts of Magnetorotational Instability in Magnetized Core-Collapse Supernovae
Hidetomo Sawai, Shoichi Yamada

TL;DR
This study uses 2D MHD simulations to explore how magnetorotational instability influences core-collapse supernovae, revealing its role in amplifying magnetic fields, enhancing neutrino heating, and affecting explosion dynamics.
Contribution
It demonstrates the significant impact of MRI on supernova explosion mechanisms, highlighting the importance of buoyant modes and neutrino heating in the process.
Findings
MRI amplifies seed magnetic fields via buoyant mode.
MRI enhances neutrino heating by redistributing matter.
Magnetic fields and MRI significantly increase explosion energy.
Abstract
We carried out 2D-axisymmetric MHD simulations of core-collapse supernovae for rapidly-rotating magnetized progenitors. By changing both the strength of the magnetic field and the spatial resolution, the evolution of the magnetorotational instability (MRI) and its impacts upon the dynamics are investigated. We found that the MRI greatly amplifies the seed magnetic fields in the regime where not the Alfv\'en mode but the buoyant mode plays a primary role in the exponential growth phase. The MRI indeed has a powerful impact on the supernova dynamics. It makes the shock expansion faster and the explosion more energetic, with some models being accompanied by the collimated-jet formations. These effects, however, are not made by the magnetic pressure except for the collimated-jet formations. The angular momentum transfer induced by the MRI causes the expansion of the heating region, by which…
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