Standing Accretion Shock Instability in the Collapse of a Rotating Stellar Core
Laurie Walk, Thierry Foglizzo, Irene Tamborra

TL;DR
This paper explores how stellar rotation influences the development of the standing accretion-shock instability (SASI) during core-collapse supernovae, highlighting the importance of acoustic wave coupling and core angular momentum.
Contribution
It provides a perturbative analysis comparing SASI in rotating stellar cores within cylindrical and spherical geometries, revealing the effects of rotation and geometry on instability growth.
Findings
Rotation favors prograde spiral modes $m=1$ and $m=2$.
Spherical geometry leads to faster growth rates of SASI.
Oscillation frequency of SASI is insensitive to geometry.
Abstract
Hydrodynamical instabilities, such as the standing accretion-shock instability (SASI), play an essential role in the dynamics of core-collapse supernovae, with observable imprints in the neutrino and gravitational wave signals. Yet, the impact of stellar rotation on the development of SASI is poorly explored. We investigate the conditions favoring the growth of SASI in the presence of rotation through a perturbative analysis. The properties of SASI are compared in two stationary configurations, cylindrical and spherical equatorial, which mainly differ by their advection timescales from the shock to the proto-neutron star surface. Without rotation, the mode , corresponding to a one-armed spiral SASI deformation, can be significantly more unstable in the spherical equatorial configuration. In fact, the shorter advection time in the spherical equatorial geometry allows for a larger…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astro and Planetary Science
