Numerical simulations of the random angular momentum in convection II: delayed explosions of red supergiants following "failed'' supernovae [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2301.05237


When collapse of the iron core in a massive red or yellow supergiant does not lead to a neutrino-driven explosion, a significant fraction of the convective hydrogen envelope will fall in towards the black hole formed from the collapsing core. The random velocity field in the convective envelope results in finite specific angular momentum in each infalling shell. Using 3D hydrodynamical simulations, we follow the infall of this material to small radii, resolving the circularization radii of the flow. We show that infall of the convective envelope leads to nearly complete envelope ejection in a $\gtrsim$ 10$^{48}$ erg explosion with outflow speeds of $\gtrsim$ 200 km/s. The light curve of such an explosion would show a characteristic, red plateau as the ejecta cools and a hydrogen recombination front recedes through the expanding ejecta. Adopting supernova IIp scalings, the event would have a plateau luminosity of $\gtrsim$ 10$^{40}$ erg/s and a duration of several hundreds of days. These events would appear quite similar to luminous red novae with red or yellow supergiant progenitors; some luminous red novae may, in fact, be signposts of black hole formation. The mechanism studied here produces more energetic explosions than the weak shock generated from the radiation of neutrino energy during the proto-neutron star phase. Because we cannot simulate all the way to the horizon, our results are likely lower limits on the energy and luminosity of transients produced during the collapse of a red or yellow supergiant to form a black hole.

Read this paper on arXiv…

A. Antoni and E. Quataert
Mon, 16 Jan 23
2/50

Comments: 18 pages, 13 figures. Submitted to MNRAS. Comments welcome