Neutrino emission characteristics of black hole formation in three-dimensional simulations of stellar collapse
Laurie Walk, Irene Tamborra (Niels Bohr Institute), Hans-Thomas Janka,, Alexander Summa, Daniel Kresse (MPA, Garching)

TL;DR
This study analyzes neutrino signals from 3D simulations of black hole-forming stellar collapses, highlighting the detectability of spiral SASI features and their evolution prior to black hole formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed prediction of neutrino signals from 3D BH-forming stellar collapses, emphasizing the detectability of spiral SASI signatures in current and future detectors.
Findings
Spiral SASI episodes produce distinguishable neutrino signal peaks.
Neutrino signals can reveal SASI evolution over time.
Detectability of SASI features extends up to ~30 kpc in optimal scenarios.
Abstract
Neutrinos are unique probes of core-collapse supernova dynamics, especially in the case of black hole (BH) forming stellar collapses, where the electromagnetic emission may be faint or absent. By investigating two 3D hydrodynamical simulations of BH-forming stellar collapses of mass 40 and 75 M_sun, we identify the physical processes preceding BH formation through neutrinos, and forecast the neutrino signal expected in the existing IceCube and Super-Kamiokande detectors, as well as in the future generation DUNE facility. Prior to the abrupt termination of the neutrino signal corresponding to BH formation, both models develop episodes of strong and long-lasting activity by the spiral standing accretion shock instability (SASI). We find that the spiral SASI peak in the Fourier power spectrum of the neutrino event rate will be distinguishable at 3 sigma above the detector noise for…
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