3D Simulations of Strongly Magnetised Non-Rotating Supernovae: Explosion Dynamics and Remnant Properties
Vishnu Varma, Bernhard Mueller, Fabian R. N. Schneider

TL;DR
This study uses 3D simulations to explore how strong magnetic fields influence the explosion dynamics and remnant properties of non-rotating supernovae, revealing early shock revival and magnetic field amplification effects.
Contribution
It introduces detailed 3D simulations of non-rotating supernovae with strong initial magnetic fields, highlighting their role in explosion timing and neutron star characteristics.
Findings
Strong magnetic fields trigger earlier shock revival.
Magnetic fields reach 40% of kinetic energy in the gain region.
Neutron star kick velocity estimated at ~350 km/s.
Abstract
We investigate the impact of strong initial magnetic fields in core-collapse supernovae of non-rotating progenitors by simulating the collapse and explosion of a 16.9 Msun star for a strong- and weak-field case assuming a twisted-torus field with initial central field strengths of ~1012 G and ~106 G. The strong-field model has been set up with a view to the fossil-field scenario for magnetar formation and emulates a pre-collapse field configuration that may occur in massive stars formed by a merger. This model undergoes shock revival already 100 s after bounce and reaches an explosion energy of 9.3 x 10^50 erg at 310 ms, in contrast to a more delayed and less energetic explosion in the weak-field model. The strong magnetic fields help trigger a neutrino-driven explosion early on, which results in a rapid rise and saturation of the explosion energy. Dynamically, the strong initial field…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astro and Planetary Science
