Multidimensional Supernova Simulations with Approximative Neutrino Transport I. Neutron Star Kicks and the Anisotropy of Neutrino-Driven Explosions in Two Spatial Dimensions
L. Scheck, K. Kifonidis, H.-Th. Janka, and E. Mueller (MPI for, Astrophysics, Garching)

TL;DR
This study uses 2D supernova simulations with approximate neutrino transport to investigate how hydrodynamic instabilities lead to asymmetric explosions and neutron star kicks, revealing stochastic velocity distributions linked to explosion modes.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic 2D simulation approach with simplified neutrino transport to analyze the development of asymmetries and neutron star kicks in supernova explosions.
Findings
Hydrodynamic instabilities grow into dominant dipole and quadrupole modes.
Neutron star acceleration occurs over 2-3 seconds due to anisotropic forces.
Results suggest a bimodal distribution of neutron star velocities, with some exceeding 1000 km/s.
Abstract
By means of two-dimensional (2D) simulations we study hydrodynamic instabilities during the first seconds of neutrino-driven supernova explosions, using a PPM hydrodynamics code, supplemented with a gray, non-equilibrium approximation of radial neutrino transport. We consider three 15 solar mass progenitors with different structures and one rotating model, in which we replace the dense core of the newly formed neutron star (NS) by a contracting inner grid boundary, and trigger neutrino-driven explosions by systematically varying the neutrino fluxes emitted at this boundary. Confirming more idealized studies as well as supernova simulations with spectral transport, we find that random seed perturbations can grow by hydrodynamic instabilities to a globally asymmetric mass distribution, leading to a dominance of dipole (l=1) and quadrupole (l=2) modes in the explosion ejecta. Anisotropic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeutrino Physics Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
