1,554 research outputs found
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
Neutrinos from Fallback onto Newly Formed Neutron Stars
In the standard supernova picture, type Ib/c and type II supernovae are
powered by the potential energy released in the collapse of the core of a
massive star. In studying supernovae, we primarily focus on the ejecta that
makes it beyond the potential well of the collapsed core. But, as we shall show
in this paper, in most supernova explosions, a tenth of a solar mass or more of
the ejecta is decelerated enough that it does not escape the potential well of
that compact object. This material falls back onto the proto-neutron star
within the first 10-15 seconds after the launch of the explosion, releasing
more than 1e52erg of additional potential energy. Most of this energy is
emitted in the form of neutrinos and we must understand this fallback neutrino
emission if we are to use neutrino observations to study the behavior of matter
at high densities. Here we present both a 1-dimensional study of fallback using
energy-injected, supernova explosions and a first study of neutrino emission
from fallback using a suite of 2-dimensional simulations.Comment: 30 pages (including 10 figures), submitted to ApJ, comments welcom
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
Why a Single-Star Model Cannot Explain the Bipolar Nebula of Eta Carinae
I examine the angular momentum evolution during the 1837-1856 Great Eruption
of the massive star Eta Carinae. I find that the new estimate of the mass blown
during that eruption implies that the envelope of Eta Car substantially
spun-down during the 20 years eruption. Single-star models, most of which
require the envelope to rotate close to the break-up velocity, cannot account
for the bipolar nebula (the Homunculus) formed from matter expelled in that
eruption. The kinetic energy and momentum of the Homunculus further constrains
single-star models. I discuss how Eta Car can fit into a unified model for the
formation of bipolar lobes where two oppositely ejected jets inflate two lobes
(or bubbles). These jets are blown by an accretion disk, which requires stellar
companions in the case of bipolar nebulae around stellar objects.Comment: ApJ, in press. New references and segments were adde
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