The role of the hadron-quark phase transition in core-collapse supernovae.

Mon Not R Astron Soc

Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies, Giersch Science Center, Frankfurt am Main, 60438, Germany.

Published: October 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The hadron-quark phase transition in quantum chromodynamics is explored as a possible mechanism for core-collapse supernovae explosions.
  • The study examines three different equations of state (EoS) through 97 simulations of various sun-like progenitor stars and identifies weak explosions only in low-compactness models, primarily with the DD2F_SF EoS.
  • Notable findings include unique neutrino signals from the explosions and significant overproduction of certain nuclei, while also revealing that many models fail to explode and exhibit inverted convection in the core, potentially leading to unique gravitational-wave signals.

Article Abstract

The hadron-quark phase transition in quantum chromodynamics has been suggested as an alternative explosion mechanism for core-collapse supernovae. We study the impact of three different hadron-quark equations of state (EoS) with first-order (DD2F_SF, STOS-B145) and second-order (CMF) phase transitions on supernova dynamics by performing 97 simulations for solar- and zero-metallicity progenitors in the range of [Formula: see text]. We find explosions only for two low-compactness models (14 and [Formula: see text]) with the DD2F_SF EoS, both with low explosion energies of [Formula: see text]. These weak explosions are characterized by a neutrino signal with several minibursts in the explosion phase due to complex reverse shock dynamics, in addition to the typical second neutrino burst for phase-transition-driven explosions. The nucleosynthesis shows significant overproduction of nuclei such as Zr for the [Formula: see text] zero-metallicity model and Zr for the [Formula: see text] solar-metallicity model, but the overproduction factors are not large enough to place constraints on the occurrence of such explosions. Several other low-compactness models using the DD2F_SF EoS and two high-compactness models using the STOS EoS end up as failed explosions and emit a second neutrino burst. For the CMF EoS, the phase transition never leads to a second bounce and explosion. For all three EoS, inverted convection occurs deep in the core of the protocompact star due to anomalous behaviour of thermodynamic derivatives in the mixed phase, which heats the core to entropies up to 4 /baryon and may have a distinctive gravitational-wave signature, also for a second-order phase transition.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9467458PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stac2352DOI Listing

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