On the Origin of Mass Ejection in Failed Supernovae
Daniel A. Paradiso, Sarah Vallejo, Eric R. Coughlin

TL;DR
This paper investigates the stability and evolution of weak shockwaves caused by neutrino emission in failed supernovae, revealing how mass loss and stellar structure influence shock strength and ejecta.
Contribution
It demonstrates that larger Mach number solutions are unstable and grow over time, and identifies key factors determining shock strength and material ejection in failed supernovae.
Findings
Larger Mach number solutions are unstable and their Mach number grows with time.
Smaller Mach number solutions are stable.
Mass loss relative to enclosed mass and stellar density gradient dictate shock strength and ejecta.
Abstract
Some high-mass stars likely end their lives in underluminous implosions that leave behind a black hole, known as failed supernovae (FSNe). However, neutrinos radiated during proto-neutron star formation generate a weak (Mach ) shockwave in the outer layers of the star, which produces a unique transient as it breaks out of the dying star and signals its imminent disappearance. It was recently shown that there are two self-similar solutions that describe the propagation of this weak shockwave, and these solutions simultaneously contain outward-moving ejecta and fallback accretion onto the black hole. Here we show that the larger Mach number solutions are unstable, such that the Mach number of the shock grows with time and deviates from the self-similar prediction as , with , whereas the smaller Mach number solutions are stable. We…
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