Rotational Dynamics in Pulsational Pair-Instability Supernovae: Implications for Mass-Loss and Transient Events
Trang N. Huynh, Emmanouil Chatzopoulos, and Nageeb Zaman

TL;DR
This study models the effects of rotation on pulsational pair-instability supernovae, revealing how rotation influences mass ejection, energetics, and the resulting transients, potentially explaining some superluminous supernovae.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed 1D models of rotating PPISN progenitors and explores how rotation affects mass loss, chemical mixing, and transient properties.
Findings
Higher initial mass leads to greater ejected mass and energy.
Rapid rotation reduces mass ejection and kinetic energy.
Shell collisions produce luminous, hydrogen-poor transients similar to SLSN-I.
Abstract
Pulsational pair-instability supernovae (PPISNe) are transient events occurring in progenitor stars with helium cores of approximately 32-65 solar masses, where rapid electron-positron pair production induces pressure loss, collapse, and pulsations driving episodic mass loss. The number, strength, and duration of these pulses can lead to shell collisions that produce shock-powered transients, potentially explaining some of the most luminous events, such as superluminous supernovae, and other rare transients. Rapid progenitor rotation lowers the PPISN mass threshold and influences the dynamics, energetics, and chemical composition of PPISN-driven pulses. In this study, we computed 1D evolutionary models of massive, rotating PPISN progenitor stars with zero-age main-sequence masses of 85-140 solar masses and solar metallicity and 10% solar metallicity. Our analysis reveals strong…
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