3,013 research outputs found
On the Progenitors of Collapsars
We study the evolution of stars that may be the progenitors of common
(long-soft) GRBs. Bare rotating helium stars, presumed to have lost their
envelopes due to winds or companions, are followed from central helium ignition
to iron core collapse. Including realistic estimates of angular momentum
transport (Heger, Langer, & Woosley 2000) by non-magnetic processes and mass
loss, one is still able to create a collapsed object at the end with sufficient
angular momentum to form a centrifugally supported disk, i.e., to drive a
collapsar engine. However, inclusion of current estimates of magnetic torques
(Spruit 2002) results in too little angular momentum for collapsars.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figures, in Proc. Woods Hole GRB meeting, ed. Roland
  Vanderspe
Thermonuclear Bursts with Short Recurrence Times from Neutron Stars Explained by Opacity-Driven Convection
Thermonuclear flashes of hydrogen and helium accreted onto neutron stars
produce the frequently observed Type I X-ray bursts. It is the current paradigm
that almost all material burns in a burst, after which it takes hours to
accumulate fresh fuel for the next burst. In rare cases, however, bursts are
observed with recurrence times as short as minutes. We present the first
one-dimensional multi-zone simulations that reproduce this phenomenon. Bursts
that ignite in a relatively hot neutron star envelope leave a substantial
fraction of the fuel unburned at shallow depths. In the wake of the burst,
convective mixing events driven by opacity bring this fuel down to the ignition
depth on the observed timescale of minutes. There, unburned hydrogen mixes with
the metal-rich ashes, igniting to produce a subsequent burst. We find burst
pairs and triplets, similar to the observed instances. Our simulations
reproduce the observed fraction of bursts with short waiting times of ~30%, and
demonstrate that short recurrence time bursts are typically less bright and of
shorter duration.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Fallback and Black Hole Production in Massive Stars
The compact remnants of core collapse supernovae - neutron stars and black
holes - have properties that reflect both the structure of their stellar
progenitors and the physics of the explosion. In particular, the masses of
these remnants are sensitive to the density structure of the presupernova star
and to the explosion energy. To a considerable extent, the final mass is
determined by the ``fallback'', during the explosion, of matter that initially
moves outwards, yet ultimately fails to escape. We consider here the simulated
explosion of a large number of massive stars (10 to 100 \Msun) of Population I
(solar metallicity) and III (zero metallicity), and find systematic differences
in the remnant mass distributions. As pointed out by Chevalier(1989),
supernovae in more compact progenitor stars have stronger reverse shocks and
experience more fallback. For Population III stars above about 25 \Msun and
explosion energies less than  erg, black holes are a common
outcome, with masses that increase monotonically with increasing main sequence
mass up to a maximum hole mass of about 35 \Msun. If such stars produce primary
nitrogen, however, their black holes are systematically smaller. For modern
supernovae with nearly solar metallicity, black hole production is much less
frequent and the typical masses, which depend sensitively on explosion energy,
are smaller. We explore the neutron star initial mass function for both
populations and, for reasonable assumptions about the initial mass cut of the
explosion, find good agreement with the average of observed masses of neutron
stars in binaries. We also find evidence for a bimodal distribution of neutron
star masses with a spike around 1.2 \Msun (gravitational mass) and a broader
distribution peaked around 1.4 \Msun.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
New Two-Dimensional Models of Supernova Explosions by the Neutrino-Heating Mechanism: Evidence for Different Instability Regimes in Collapsing Stellar Cores
The neutrino-driven explosion mechanism for core-collapse supernovae in its
modern flavor relies on the additional support of hydrodynamical instabilities
in achieving shock revival. Two possible candidates, convection and the
so-called standing accretion shock instability (SASI), have been proposed for
this role. In this paper, we discuss new successful simulations of supernova
explosions that shed light on the relative importance of these two
instabilities. While convection has so far been observed to grow first in
self-consistent hydrodynamical models with multi-group neutrino transport, we
here present the first such simulation in which the SASI grows faster while the
development of convection is initially inhibited. We illustrate the features of
this SASI-dominated regime using an explosion model of a 27 solar mass
progenitor, which is contrasted with a convectively-dominated model of an 8.1
solar mass progenitor with subsolar metallicity, whose early post-bounce
behavior is more in line with previous 11.2 and 15 solar mass explosion models.
We analyze the conditions discriminating between the two different regimes,
showing that a high mass-accretion rate and a short advection time-scale are
conducive for strong SASI activity. We also briefly discuss some important
factors for capturing the SASI-driven regime, such as general relativity, the
progenitor structure, a nuclear equation of state leading to a compact
proto-neutron star, and the neutrino treatment. Finally, we evaluate possible
implications of our findings for 2D and 3D supernova simulations. Our results
show that a better understanding of the SASI and convection in the non-linear
regime is required.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures; revised version accepted for publication in Ap
Neutrino Nucleosynthesis of radioactive nuclei in supernovae
We study the neutrino-induced production of nuclides in explosive supernova
nucleosynthesis for progenitor stars with solar metallicity and initial main
sequence masses between 15 M and 40 M. We improve previous
investigations i) by using a global set of partial differential cross sections
for neutrino-induced charged- and neutral-current reactions on nuclei with
charge numbers  and ii) by considering modern supernova neutrino
spectra which have substantially lower average energies compared to those
previously adopted in neutrino nucleosynthesis studies. We confirm the
production of Li, B, La, and Ta by neutrino
nucleosynthesis, albeit at slightly smaller abundances due to the changed
neutrino spectra. We find that for stars with a mass smaller than 20 M,
F is produced mainly by explosive nucleosynthesis while for higher mass
stars it is produced by the  process. We also find that neutrino-induced
reactions, either directly or indirectly by providing an enhanced abundance of
light particles, noticeably contribute to the production of the radioactive
nuclides Na and Al. Both nuclei are prime candidates for
gamma-ray astronomy. Other prime targets, Ti and Fe, however, are
insignificantly produced by neutrino-induced reactions. We also find a large
increase in the production of the long-lived nuclei Nb and Tc due
to charged-current neutrino capture.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, 2 table
Evolution and Nucleosynthesis of Very Massive Primordial Stars
We investigate the evolution, final fate, and nucleosynthetic yields of
rotating and non-rotating very massive stars (VMS) of zero metallicity. First
we address the issue of mass loss during hydrogen burning due to vibrational
instabilities. We find that these objects are much more stable than what was
found in previous studies of VMS of solar composition, and expect only
negligible mass loss driven by the pulsations. As these stars thus reach the
end of their evolution with massive helium cores, they encounter the
pair-creation instability. We find that for helium core masses of ~64...133
solar masses these stars are completely disrupted with explosion energies of up
to ~1E53 erg and eject up to ~60 solar masses of Ni56 Stars with more massive
helium cores collapse into black holes. We present the first calculations that
follow the collapse of such a massive rotating star and predict that X-ray
burst and significant gravitational wave emission could result.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, LaTeX, requires espcrc1.sty. To appear in Nucl.
  Phys. A., the proceedings of the conference "Nuclei in the Cosmos 2000", held
  in Aarhus, Denmark, June 27-July 1, 200
- …
