Fig. 1: Three-dimensional explosion simulation about 0.5 seconds after core bounce. The bluish, nearly transparent surface is the shock front with an average radius of 1900 km. Copyright: Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
Fig. 2: These snap-shots show the outward mixing of certain elements in the supernova explosion from two different viewing directions, 350 seconds after core bounce in the upper two panels and after 9000 seconds in the lower two panels, when the shock has broken out of the stellar surface. The surfaces denote the radially outermost locations of carbon (green), oxygen (red), and nickel (blue) with a constant mass fraction. Copyright: Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
Fig. 3: The Cassiopeia A nebula is the gaseous remnant of a supernova explosion whose light reached the Earth around the year 1680. The asymmetries and filamentary structure of this expanding cloud of stellar debris are a consequence of the clumping and mixing processes that also played a role in Supernova 1987A and that were simulated for the first time in all three dimensions by the team at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics. Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/SAO; Optical: NASA/STScI; Infrared: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Steward/O.Krause et al.
Researchers of the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics in Garching managed for the first time to reproduce the asymmetries and fast-moving iron clumps of observed supernovae by complex computer simulations in all three dimensions. To this end they successfully followed the outburst in their models consistently from milliseconds after the onset of the blast to the demise of the star several hours later. (Astrophysical Journal, 10 May 2010)
Massive stars end their lives in gigantic explosions, so called supernovae, and can become — for a short time — brighter than a whole galaxy, which is made up of billions of stars. Although supernovae have been studied theoretically by computer models for several decades, the physical processes happening during these blasts are so complex that astrophysicists until now can simulate only parts of the process and so far only in one or two dimensions. Researches at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics in Garching have now carried out the first fully three-dimensional computer simulations of a core collapse supernova over a timescale of hours after the initiation of the blast. They thus could answer the question how initial asymmetries, which emerge deep in the dense core during the very early stages of the explosion, fold themselves into inhomogeneities observable during the supernova blast.
While the great energy of the outburst makes these stellar explosions visible far out into the Universe, they are relatively rare. In a galaxy of the size of our Milky Way, on average only one supernova will occur in 50 years. About twenty years ago, a supernova could be seen even with the naked eye: SN 1987A in the Tarantula Nebula in the Large Magellanic Cloud, our neighbouring galaxy. This relative closeness — ”only“ about 170 000 light years away — allowed many detailed observations in different wavelength bands over weeks and even months. SN 1987A turned out to be a core-collapse supernova, a so-called Type II event. It occurs when a massive star, which is at least nine times heavier than the sun, has burned almost all its fuel. The fusion engine in the centre of the star begins to stutter, triggering an internal collapse and thus a violent explosion of the entire star. In the case of SN 1987A the star had about 20 solar masses at its birth.
SN 1987A is probably the best studied supernova and it is still a great challenge to develop and refine models of what was happening inside the dying star to produce its emission of radiation. One of the astonishing and unexpected discoveries in SN 1987A and many subsequent supernovae was the fact that nickel and iron — heavy elements that are formed near the centre of the explosion — are mixed outward in big clumps into the hydrogen shell of the disrupted star. Nickel bullets were observed to propagate at velocities of thousands of kilometres per second, much faster than the surrounding hydrogen and much faster than predicted by simple hydrodynamic calculations in one dimension (1D), i.e., only studying the radial profile from the centre outwards.
In fact, it turned out that the brightness evolution (the so-called light curve) of SN 1987A and of similar core-collapse supernovae can only be understood if large amounts of heavy core material (in particular radioactive nickel) are mixed outwards into the stellar envelope, and light elements (hydrogen and helium from the envelope) are carried inwards to the core.
The details of supernova explosions are very difficult to simulate, not only because of the complexity of the physical processes involved but also because of the duration and range of scales — from hundreds of metres near the centre to tens of millions of kilometres near the stellar surface — that need to be resolved in ultimately three- dimensional (3D) computer models. Previously conducted simulations in two dimensions (2D, i.e., with the assumption of axial symmetry) indeed showed that the spherical shell structure of the progenitor star is destroyed during the supernova blast and large-scale mixing takes place. But the real world is three-dimensional and not all observational aspects can be reproduced by 2D models.
The new computer models of the team at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics now simulate for the first time the complete burst in all three dimensions, from the first milliseconds after the explosion is triggered in the core to a time three hours later, when the shock breaks out of the progenitor star. ”We found substantial deviations in our 3D models compared to previous work in 2D,“ says Nicolay Hammer, the lead author of the paper, ”especially the growth of instabilities and the propagation of clumps differ. These are not just minor variations; this effect determines the long-time evolution and ultimately the extent of mixing and observable appearance of core- collapse supernovae.“
In the 3D-simulations, metal-rich clumps have much higher velocities than in the 2D case. These ”bullets“ expand much more rapidly, overtaking material from the outer layers. ”With a simple analytic model we could demonstrate that the different geometry of the bullets, toroidal versus quasi-spherical, can explain the differences observed in our simulations,“ explains co-author Thomas Janka. ”While we think that the differences between the 2D- and 3D-models that we found are probably generic, many features will depend strongly on the structure of the progenitor star, the overall energy and the initial asymmetry of the blast.“
”We hope that our models, in comparison to observations, will help us to understand how stellar explosions start and what causes them“, adds Ewald Müller, the third author of the paper. Investigating a wider variety of progenitor stars and initial conditions will therefore be the focus of future simulation work. In particular, a detailed model that reproduces all observational features of SN 1987A still remains a challenge.
Original publication
N.J. Hammer, H.-Th. Janka, E. Müller, "Three-dimensional simulations of mixing instabilities in supernova explosions", The Astrophysical Journal 714 (2010) 1371-1385
Links
Computer simulation of the first 500 milliseconds (Source: Leonhard Scheck, Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics)
Computer simulation up to 9000 seconds (Visualisation: Markus Rampp, Rechenzentrum Garching)
Contact
Dr. Hannelore Hämmerle
Press Officer
Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
and Max Planck Institute for extraterrestrial Physics
Phone: +49 89 30000-3980
E-Mail: hhaemmerlempa-garching.mpg.de