829 research outputs found
Neutrino-driven explosions twenty years after SN1987A
The neutrino-heating mechanism remains a viable possibility for the cause of
the explosion in a wide mass range of supernova progenitors. This is
demonstrated by recent two-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations with detailed,
energy-dependent neutrino transport. Neutrino-driven explosions were not only
found for stars in the range of 8-10 solar masses with ONeMg cores and in case
of the iron core collapse of a progenitor with 11 solar masses, but also for a
``typical'' progenitor model of 15 solar masses. For such more massive stars,
however, the explosion occurs significantly later than so far thought, and is
crucially supported by large-amplitude bipolar oscillations due to the
nonradial standing accretion shock instability (SASI), whose low (dipole and
quadrupole) modes can develop large growth rates in conditions where convective
instability is damped or even suppressed. The dominance of low-mode deformation
at the time of shock revival has been recognized as a possible explanation of
large pulsar kicks and of large-scale mixing phenomena observed in supernovae
like SN 1987A.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures; review proceeding for "Supernova 1987A: 20 Years
After: Supernovae and Gamma-Ray Bursters" AIP, New York, eds. S. Immler, K.W.
Weiler, and R. McCra
Core-Collapse Supernovae: Modeling between Pragmatism and Perfectionism
We briefly summarize recent efforts in Garching for modeling stellar core
collapse and post-bounce evolution in one and two dimensions. The transport of
neutrinos of all flavors is treated by iteratively solving the coupled system
of frequency-dependent moment equations together with a model Boltzmann
equation which provides the closure. A variety of progenitor stars, different
nuclear equations of state, stellar rotation, and global asymmetries due to
large-mode hydrodynamic instabilities have been investigated to ascertain the
road to finally successful, convectively supported neutrino-driven explosions.Comment: 8 pages, contribution to Procs. 12th Workshop on Nuclear
Astrophysics, Ringberg Castle, March 22-27, 200
The Cosmic Web from Perturbation Theory
Context: Analyzing the large-scale structure (LSS) with galaxy surveys
demands accurate structure formation models. Such models should ideally be fast
and have a clear theoretical framework to rapidly scan a variety of
cosmological parameter spaces without requiring large training data sets. Aims:
This study aims to extend Lagrangian perturbation theory (LPT), including
viscosity and vorticity, to reproduce the cosmic evolution from dark matter
N-body calculations at the field level. Methods: We extend LPT to an Eulerian
framework, dubbed eALPT. An ultraviolet regularisation through the spherical
collapse model provided by Augmented LPT, turns out to be crucial at low
redshifts. This enables modelling the stress tensor, with this introducing
vorticity. The model has two free parameters apart from the choice of
cosmology, redshift snapshots, cosmic volume, and the number of
particles-cells. Results: We find that the cross-correlation of the dark matter
distribution as compared to N-body solvers increases at Mpc
and from 55\% with the Zel'dovich approximation (70\% with
ALPT), to 95\% with three timesteps eALPT, and power spectra within
percentage accuracy up to Mpc.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Is a soft nuclear equation of state extracted from heavy-ion data incompatible with pulsar data?
We discuss the recent constraints on the nuclear equation of state from
pulsar mass measurements and from subthreshold production of kaons in heavy-ion
collisions. While recent pulsar data points towards a hard equation of state,
the analysis of the heavy-ion data allows only for soft equations of state. We
resolve the apparent contradiction by considering the different density regimes
probed. We argue that future measurements of global properties of low-mass
pulsars can serve as an excellent cross-check to heavy-ion data.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, contribution to the proceedings of the
international conference on 'Nuclear Physics in Astrophysics III', Dresden,
Germany, March 26-31, 2007, minor corrections to match published version, JPG
in pres
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