Constraints on explosive silicon burning in core-collapse supernovae from measured Ni/Fe ratios
A. Jerkstrand, F. X. Timmes, G. Magkotsios, S. A. Sim, C. Fransson, J., Spyromilio, A. Heger, B. M\"uller, J. Sollerman, S. J. Smartt

TL;DR
This paper investigates how measured Ni/Fe ratios in supernovae constrain the conditions of explosive silicon burning, revealing insights into progenitor layers and explosion models.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on explosive conditions in core-collapse supernovae based on Ni/Fe ratios, linking observed ratios to progenitor layers and explosion dynamics.
Findings
Ni/Fe ratio depends on neutron excess and entropy.
Supernovae with high Ni/Fe ratios likely eject silicon shell material.
Crab supernova's extreme Ni/Fe ratio explained by electron-capture models.
Abstract
Measurements of explosive nucleosynthesis yields in core-collapse supernovae provide tests for explosion models. We investigate constraints on explosive conditions derivable from measured amounts of nickel and iron after radioactive decays using nucleosynthesis networks with parameterized thermodynamic trajectories. The Ni/Fe ratio is for most regimes dominated by the production ratio of 58Ni/(54Fe + 56Ni), which tends to grow with higher neutron excess and with higher entropy. For SN 2012ec, a supernova that produced a Ni/Fe ratio of times solar, we find that burning of a fuel with neutron excess is required. Unless the progenitor metallicity is over 5 times solar, the only layer in the progenitor with such a neutron excess is the silicon shell. Supernovae producing large amounts of stable nickel thus suggest that this deep-lying layer can be,…
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