Convection, nucleosynthesis, and core collapse

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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Gravitational Collapse, Hydrodynamics, Nuclear Fusion, Stellar Convection, Stellar Cores, Stellar Evolution, Stellar Models, Supernovae, Carbon, Computerized Simulation, Mathematical Models, Nickel, Oxygen, Stellar Gravitation, Stellar Mass

Scientific paper

We use a piecewise parabolic method hydrodynamics code (PROMETHEUS) to study convective burning in two dimensions in an oxygen shell prior to core collapse. Significant mixing beyond convective boundaries determined by mixing-length theory brings fuel (C-12) into the convective region, causing hot spots of nuclear burning. Plumes dominate the velocity structure. Finite perturbations arise in a region in which O-16 will be explosively burned to Ni-56 when the star explodes; the resulting instabilities and mixing are likely to distribute Ni-56 throughout the supernova envelope. Inhomogeneities in Ye may be large enough to affect core collapse and will affect explosive nucleosynthesis. The nature of convective burning is dramatically different from that assumed in one-dimensional simulations; quantitative estimates of nucleosynthetic yields, core masses, and the approach to core collapse will be affected.

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