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http://dx.doi.org/10.5303/PKAS.2015.30.2.481

THREE-DIMENSIONAL SIMULATION OF A ROTATING CORE-COLLAPSE SUPERNOVA  

NAKAMURA, KO (Faculty of Science and Engineering, Waseda University)
KURODA, TAKAMI (Department of Physics, University of Basel)
TAKIWAKI, TOMOYA (National Astronomical Observatory of Japan)
KOTAKE, KEI (National Astronomical Observatory of Japan)
Publication Information
Publications of The Korean Astronomical Society / v.30, no.2, 2015 , pp. 481-483 More about this Journal
Abstract
Multi-dimensionality in the inner working of core-collapse supernovae has long been considered one of the most important ingredients to understand the explosion mechanism. We perform a series of numerical experiments to explore how rotation impacts the 3-dimensional hydrodynamics of core-collapse supernova. We employ a light-bulb scheme to trigger explosions and a three-species neutrino leakage scheme to treat deleptonization effects and neutrino losses from the neutron star interior. We find that the rotation can help the onset of neutrino-driven explosions for models in which the initial angular momentum is matched to that obtained from recent stellar evolutionary calculations (${\sim}0.3-3rad\;s^{-1}$ at the center). For models with larger initial angular momenta, a shock surface deforms to be oblate due to larger centrifugal force. This makes a gain region, in which matter gains energy from neutrinos, more concentrated around the equatorial plane. As a result, the preferred direction of the explosion in 3-dimensional rotating models is perpendicular to the spin axis, which is in sharp contrast to the polar explosions around the axis that are often obtained from 2-dimensional simulations.
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