The Impact of $^{12}$C($\alpha, \gamma$)$^{16}$O Reaction on the Presupernova Evolution and Supernova Explodability of Massive Stars
Wenyu Xin, Ken'ichi Nomoto, Gang Zhao

TL;DR
This study examines how the $^{12}$C($ angle, ext{gamma}$)$^{16}$O reaction rate influences the evolution and explodability of massive stars, affecting whether they form neutron stars or black holes.
Contribution
It demonstrates the sensitivity of stellar explodability to the $^{12}$C($ angle, ext{gamma}$)$^{16}$O reaction rate and introduces a method to estimate critical structural parameters for supernova outcomes.
Findings
Smaller reaction rate favors neutron star formation.
Steeper pressure gradients increase explosion likelihood.
Enhanced C shell burning affects core mass and structure.
Abstract
Among the uncertainties of stellar evolution theory, we investigate how the C()O reaction rate affects the evolution of massive stars for the initial masses of 13 - 40 M and the solar metallicity. We show that the {\sl explodability} of these stars, i.e., which of a neutron star (NS) or a black hole (BH) is formed, is sensitive to the strength of convective shell burning of C and O, and thus the mass fractions of C ((C)) and O in the shell. For the small C()O reaction rate that yields larger (C), (C) is further enhanced by mixing of C from the overlying layer and then C shell burning is strengthened. The extra heating by C shell burning tends to prevent the contraction of outer layers and decrease the {\sl compactness parameter} at = 2.5 M. This effect leads to the formation of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Nuclear physics research studies
