Turbulence in Core-Collapse Supernovae
David Calvert, Michael Redle, Bibek Gautam, Charles J. Stapleford, Carla Fr\"ohlich, James P. Kneller, Matthias Liebendorfer

TL;DR
This paper investigates how different definitions of turbulence in 3D supernova simulations affect the assessment of turbulence's role in aiding explosions, revealing that measurement methods significantly influence conclusions.
Contribution
The study systematically compares multiple turbulence definitions in supernova simulations, highlighting their impact on turbulence quantification and interpretation.
Findings
Different turbulence definitions yield similar growth patterns but varying total energies.
Some definitions suggest turbulence is essential for explosion, others do not.
Turbulent adiabatic index varies with turbulence measurement method.
Abstract
It is understood in a general sense that turbulent fluid motion below the shock front in a core-collapse supernova stiffens the effective equation of state of the fluid and aids in the revival of the explosion. However, when one wishes to be precise and quantify the amount of turbulence in a supernova simulation, one immediately encounters the problem that turbulence is difficult to define and measure. Using the 3D magnetohydrodynamic code ELEPHANT, we study how different definitions of turbulence change one's conclusions about the amount of turbulence in a supernova and the extent to which it helps the explosion. We find that, while all the definitions of turbulence we use lead to a qualitatively similar growth pattern over time of the turbulent kinetic energy in the gain region, the total amount of turbulent kinetic energy, and especially the ratios of turbulent to total kinetic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Neutrino Physics Research
