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CORE-COLLAPSE SUPERNOVAE FROM 9 TO 120 SOLAR MASSES BASED ON NEUTRINO-POWERED EXPLOSIONS

Astrophysical Journal, ISSN: 1538-4357, Vol: 821, Issue: 1
2016
  • 855
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 181
    Captures
  • 10
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    855
    • Citation Indexes
      855
  • Captures
    181
  • Mentions
    10
    • News Mentions
      8
      • News
        8
    • Blog Mentions
      2
      • Blog
        2

Most Recent Blog

Astronomers have found a VERY sneaky black hole

There is always something new and exciting happening in the field of black hole research. Albert Einstein first published his book explaining the theory of general relativity – which postulated black holes – in 1922. One hundred years later, astronomers captured actual images of the black hole at the center of the Milky Way. In a recent paper, a team of astronomers describes another exciting new d

Most Recent News

Astronomers Have Discovered an Especially Sneaky Black Hole – SciTechDaily

By Idan Ginsburg, Georgia State University August 21, 2022 VFTS 243 is a binary system of a large, hot blue star and a black hole

Article Description

Nucleosynthesis, light curves, explosion energies, and remnant masses are calculated for a grid of supernovae (SNe) resulting from massive stars with solar metallicity and masses from 9.0 to 120 M⊙. The full evolution is followed using an adaptive reaction network of up to 2000 nuclei. A novel aspect of the survey is the use of a onedimensional neutrino transport model for the explosion. This explosion model has been calibrated to give the observed energy for SN 1987A, using five standard progenitors, and for the Crab SN using a 9.6 M⊙ progenitor. As a result of using a calibrated central engine, the final kinetic energy of the SN is variable and sensitive to the structure of each pre-SN star. Many progenitors with extended core structures do not explode, but become black holes (BHs), and the masses of exploding stars do not form a simply connected set. The resulting nucleosynthesis agrees reasonably well with the Sun provided that a reasonable contribution from SNe Ia is also allowed, but with a deficiency of light s-process isotopes. The resulting neutron star initial mass function has a mean gravitational mass near 1.4 M⊙. The average BH mass is about 9 M⊙ if only the helium core implodes, and 14 M⊙ if the entire pre-SN star collapses. Only ~10% of SNe come from stars over 20 M⊙, and some of these are Type Ib or Ic. Some useful systematics of Type IIp light curves are explored.

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