« From Neutrino-driven Explosion Models to Observations » |
Hans-Thomas Janka |
Supernova explosions terminate the lives of massive stars, produce
and disseminate a major fraction of the heavy elements, play an important role as neutrino and particle laboratories, and give birth to neutron stars and stellar-mass black holes, which have recently become sources of measured gravitational waves. After more than 50 years of progressively improved computational modeling, first-principle three-dimensional (3D) hydrodynamic simulations with detailed neutrino physics have meanwhile accomplished to demonstrate the viability of the neutrino-driven explosion mechanism. The consequences of such explosions can now be confronted with observations. In particular, self-consistent 3D simulations can provide new insights into the geometrical and chemical structure of young supernova remnants, possible explosion-progenitor connections, and the natal properties (masses, kicks, spins) of the compact objects formed in stellar core-collapse events. They have also allowed us to better understand the nature of the progenitor and the explosion of the famous Supernova 1987A and to predict the most-likely location of its relic neutron star. |
vendredi 16 décembre 2022 - 11:00 Amphithéâtre Henri Mineur, Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris |
Page web du séminaire / Seminar's webpage |