Supernova Simulations Confront SN 1987A Neutrinos
Damiano F. G. Fiorillo (1), Malte Heinlein (2, 3), Hans-Thomas, Janka (2), Georg Raffelt (4), Edoardo Vitagliano (5), Robert Bollig (2) ((1), Niels Bohr Institute, (2) MPI Astrophysik, (3) TUM Garching, (4) MPI Physik,, (5) Racah Institute of Physics)

TL;DR
This paper revisits SN 1987A neutrino data using modern supernova models, finding better agreement with observations and exploring implications of different neutron star masses and late-time signals.
Contribution
It introduces a suite of spherically symmetric supernova models with varied equations of state and neutron star masses, analyzing their consistency with SN 1987A neutrino data.
Findings
Models with 1.44 M$_\odot$ neutron stars fit early data well.
High neutron star masses (1.7-1.8 M$_\odot$) are favored by IMB data.
Late-time neutrino signals suggest possible fallback or phase transitions.
Abstract
We return to interpreting the historical SN~1987A neutrino data from a modern perspective. To this end, we construct a suite of spherically symmetric supernova models with the Prometheus-Vertex code, using four different equations of state and five choices of final baryonic neutron-star (NS) mass in the 1.36-1.93 M range. Our models include muons and proto-neutron star (PNS) convection by a mixing-length approximation. The time-integrated signals of our 1.44 M models agree reasonably well with the combined data of the four relevant experiments, IMB, Kam-II, BUST, and LSD, but the high-threshold IMB detector alone favors a NS mass of 1.7-1.8 M, whereas Kam-II alone prefers a mass around 1.4 M. The cumulative energy distributions in these two detectors are well matched by models for such NS masses, and the previous tension between predicted mean neutrino…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Neutrino Physics Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
