Effective supernova dust yields from rotating and non-rotating stellar progenitors
Koki Otaki, Raffaella Schneider, Luca Graziani, Alessandro Bonella, Stefania Marassi, Marco Limongi, Simone Bianchi

TL;DR
This study models the survival of supernova dust after reverse shock destruction, revealing that a small but significant fraction of dust, especially larger grains, can enrich the early universe's interstellar medium.
Contribution
It provides detailed quantification of surviving dust mass, composition, and size distribution across various progenitor models, including rotation effects and ISM conditions.
Findings
Larger grains (>10 nm) are more resistant to destruction.
Maximum surviving dust mass is about 0.02 solar masses for certain models.
Surviving dust can explain early universe features like the 2175 Å extinction bump.
Abstract
Supernovae (SNe) are believed to be the dominant sources of dust production at high redshift. However, the reverse shock generated by the interaction of the SN forward shock and the interstellar medium (ISM) significantly reduces the mass of newly formed dust in SN ejecta. This study quantifies the mass, composition, and grain size distribution of surviving dust after the passage of the reverse shock using the GRASHrev model. Our analysis covers a grid of SN models with progenitor masses , metallicity , and rotation velocities and . The SN explosions occur in a uniform ISM with densities , and . We find that the larger grains () are more resistant to destruction by the reverse shock, with amorphous carbon dominating the…
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