jens c. niemeyerjcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de what are type ia supernovae? jens c. niemeyer...
Post on 15-Jan-2016
215 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
What Are Type Ia Supernovae?What Are Type Ia Supernovae?
Jens C. NiemeyerMax-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik
Based on collaborations with:W. Hillebrandt (MPA Garching)S.E. Woosley (UC Santa Cruz)M. Reinecke (MPA Garching)
B. Leibundgut (ESO Garching)and others
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
SN 1994D
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Type Ia Supernovae:Facts ...
Type Ia Supernovae:Facts ...
General properties of SNe Ia: Very homogeneous class of events, only small (and correlated) variations.Rise time: ~ 15 - 20 daysDecay time: many months
No hydrogen is seen in the spectra !
Early spectra: Si, Ca, Mg, ...(abs.)Late spectra: Fe, Ni, …(emiss.)Very high velocities (~10000 km/s)
SN Ia are found in all types of galaxies, including ellipticals
Progenitor systems must have long lifetimes
Courtesy of the Supernova Cosmology Project
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
… and Theory: … and Theory:
“Standard model” (Hoyle & Fowler 1960):SNe Ia are thermonuclear explosions of C+O white dwarf stars.
Evolution to criticality:Accretion from a binary companion leads to growth of the WD to the critical Chandrasekhar mass (~ 1.4 solar masses).
After ~1000 years of slow thermonuclear “cooking”, a violent explosion is triggered at or near the center complete incineration within less than two seconds, no compact remnant!
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Deflagrations and Detonations Deflagrations and Detonations
Deflagrations (“Flames”):Subsonic burning fronts, propagating by heat conduction. Laminar flame speed and flame width (Timmes & Woosley
1992):
SL~ 0.001 c , ~ 1 m….1 cm
Detonations:Supersonic burning fronts, propagating by shock heating. Detonation width and speed:
SD ~ us ~ 0.1 c , D ~ 100
-In principle, both modes of propagation are allowed in the supernova. Details of the ignition process decide which mode is realized. -Both modes are hydrodynamically unstable in multiple dimensions!
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Anatomy of an Explosion I:Prompt Detonation
Anatomy of an Explosion I:Prompt Detonation
Prompt Detonation (Arnett 1969; Hansen
& Wheeler 1969):Supersonic propagation doesn’t allow the star to expand prior to being burned. Almost no production of intermediate mass elements.
Ruled out by observations!
Ignition
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Anatomy of an Explosion II:Pure Turbulent DeflagrationAnatomy of an Explosion II:Pure Turbulent Deflagration
Ignition
Deflagration Phase (many classic references):
Burning propagates as a subsonic flame. The Rayleigh-Taylor instability (buoyancy!) produces rising bubbles. Shear flows at the bubble walls produce turbulence (Kelvin-Helmholtz instability).
“Turbulent combustion”:Turbulence increases the flame surface and hence the speed. Under certain conditions, the laminar speed becomes irrelevant (J.N. & Hillebrandt 1995):The turbulent flame speed is ~ equal to the speed of the fastest turbulent eddies ! (first observed by Damköhler 1940)
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Deflagration-Detonation-Transition (DDT) (Zeldovich et al. 1970;
Khokhlov 1991; Woosley & Weaver 1994):DDT may be possible as a result of local flame quenching and fast turbulent mixing (Khokhlov 1997, J.N. &
Woosley 1997).
Advantages for 1D SN Ia models (papers by Nomoto, Höflich, Thielemann,…):
Detonation “sweeps up” unburned C+O, gives additional “kick”.Transition density is convenient tuning parameter.
Problems:Doesn’t work if flames can’t be quenched (J.N. 1999) .May not be needed (new 3D results).
Anatomy of an Explosion III:Delayed Detonation (Khokhlov 1991; Woosley
& Weaver 1994)
Anatomy of an Explosion III:Delayed Detonation (Khokhlov 1991; Woosley
& Weaver 1994)
Deflagration Phase
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Bottom Lines I:Flames and Detonations
Bottom Lines I:Flames and Detonations
Understanding turbulent combustion is crucial for understanding SN Ia explosions:Most important:1. Effective turbulent burning speed (may be independent of
microphysics!)2. “Robustness” of flames with regard to turbulent quenching (DDT!)
Delayed Detonations:Allow good fits of 1D simulations to observations. Get rid of unburned
material. Provide convenient fitting parameter for SN Ia family (transition density). BUT:
1. Physics of DDT indicates very low probability.2. May not be needed to explain explosion strength.
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Zoology:Currently Discussed Explosion
Models
Zoology:Currently Discussed Explosion
Models
MergingWhite Dwarfs
PromptDetonation
Pure (Fast)Turbulent Deflagration
Delayed Detonation Pulsational Detonation
Slow TurbulentDeflagration + DDT
InitialDeflagration
ChandrasekharMass Models
Sub-ChandrasekharMass Models
Type Ia SupernovaExplosion Models
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Multidimensional Simulations of SN Ia:
Where Are We?
Multidimensional Simulations of SN Ia:
Where Are We? Warnings:
1. Turbulence is a key element of all Chandrasekhar mass models.
2. No 2D (not to mention 3D) simulation to date reaches the fully turbulent regime!
3. This is what we really simulate:
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
2D simulation of an exploding white dwarf (Reinecke, Hillebrandt & J.N. 1998):
Uses a flame capturing/tracking scheme based on a level set method The turbulent flame speed is given by
ST = (2 q)1/2
where q is the turbulent subgrid energy obtained from a subgrid-scale model for the unresolved turbulence (J.N. & Hillebrandt 1995). Large scales solved by higher-order Godunov scheme (PPM) (Colella & Woodward 1984).
768x768 simulation:
Large Eddy Simulations of Exploding White Dwarfs
Large Eddy Simulations of Exploding White Dwarfs
Movie made by M. Reinecke
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Everything is in the details…Everything is in the details…
Reinecke 2001: Global energy release is almost independent of resolution by virtue of the subgrid-model.
256x256
1024x1024512x512
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
3D LES of Turbulent Deflagration: A Healthy Explosion?
3D LES of Turbulent Deflagration: A Healthy Explosion?
3D, resolution study:2D vs. 3D (central ignition):
explosion explosion
re-collapse re-collapse
Reinecke 2001:- Systematically higher energy release in 3D (consistent with Khokhlov 2001).- Weaker dependence on the initial conditions than in 2D.
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Problems of the Chandrasekhar Mass Paradigm
Problems of the Chandrasekhar Mass Paradigm
What are the progenitors?Any single scenario has difficulties explaining SN Ia occurrence in oldest and youngest host populations simultaneously (Howell 2001).
Where is the hydrogen?If binary companion is H donor there should be some trace of H in the spectra. None has been found so far (e.g. Cumming et al. 1996).
Where is the low-velocity C and O (or Si, Ca)?In multi-D deflagration models some unburned material always remains near the center. Can a delayed detonation get rid of all of it (Khokhlov 2001)? Or maybe fully developed turbulence?
Correlation of SN Ia subtype with host populationSubluminous events only occur in old pop.s (Howell 2001), overluminous ones in young stellar systems (Hamuy et al. 1996). Why?
Nickel massesSN 1991bg-like objects produce only ~0.1 solar masses of Ni. This amount doesn’t even unbind a Chandrasekhar mass WD…
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Zoology:Currently Discussed Explosion
Models
Zoology:Currently Discussed Explosion
Models
MergingWhite Dwarfs
PromptDetonation
Pure (Fast)Turbulent Deflagration
Delayed Detonation Pulsational Detonation
Slow TurbulentDeflagration + DDT
InitialDeflagration
ChandrasekharMass Models
Sub-ChandrasekharMass Models
Type Ia SupernovaExplosion Models
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
1.Supernova evolution2.Sample evolution3.Grey dust4.Lensing effects
Usually Discussed Systematic Effects Usually Discussed Systematic Effects
need to know what they are!
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Supernova EvolutionSupernova Evolution
high C/O
low C/O
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Sample EvolutionSample Evolution
low-massprogenitors
high-massprogenitors
Jens C. Niemeyer jcn@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Summary:What Can We Expect?
Summary:What Can We Expect?
If all SNe Ia are Chandrasekhar mass events:–Little SN evolution.–No sample evolution.
If they are either all sub-Chandras or all mergers:–Possibly substantial SN evolution.–No sample evolution.
If they are a mix of some or all of the above:–Sample and SN evolution.
top related