TY - JOUR
T1 - A three-dimensional hydrodynamics simulation of oxygen-shell burning in the final evolution of a fast-rotating massive star
AU - Yoshida, Takashi
AU - Takiwaki, Tomoya
AU - Aguilera-Dena, David R.
AU - Kotake, Kei
AU - Takahashi, Koh
AU - Nakamura, Ko
AU - Umeda, Hideyuki
AU - Langer, Norbert
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society.
PY - 2021/9/1
Y1 - 2021/9/1
N2 - We perform for the first time a 3D hydrodynamics simulation of the evolution of the last minutes pre-collapse of the oxygen shell of a fast-rotating massive star. This star has an initial mass of 38 M, a metallicity of ∼1/50 Z⊙, an initial rotational velocity of 600 km s-1, and experiences chemically homogeneous evolution. It has a silicon- and oxygen-rich (Si/O) convective layer at (4.7-17) × 108 cm, where oxygen-shell burning takes place. The power spectrum analysis of the turbulent velocity indicates the dominance of the large-scale mode (∼3), which has also been seen in non-rotating stars that have a wide Si/O layer. Spiral arm structures of density and silicon-enriched material produced by oxygen-shell burning appear in the equatorial plane of the Si/O shell. Non-axisymmetric, large-scale (m ≤ 3) modes are dominant in these structures. The spiral arm structures have not been identified in previous non-rotating 3D pre-supernova models. Governed by such a convection pattern, the angle-averaged specific angular momentum becomes constant in the Si/O convective layer, which is not considered in spherically symmetrical stellar evolution models. Such spiral arms and constant specific angular momentum might affect the ensuing explosion or implosion of the star.
AB - We perform for the first time a 3D hydrodynamics simulation of the evolution of the last minutes pre-collapse of the oxygen shell of a fast-rotating massive star. This star has an initial mass of 38 M, a metallicity of ∼1/50 Z⊙, an initial rotational velocity of 600 km s-1, and experiences chemically homogeneous evolution. It has a silicon- and oxygen-rich (Si/O) convective layer at (4.7-17) × 108 cm, where oxygen-shell burning takes place. The power spectrum analysis of the turbulent velocity indicates the dominance of the large-scale mode (∼3), which has also been seen in non-rotating stars that have a wide Si/O layer. Spiral arm structures of density and silicon-enriched material produced by oxygen-shell burning appear in the equatorial plane of the Si/O shell. Non-axisymmetric, large-scale (m ≤ 3) modes are dominant in these structures. The spiral arm structures have not been identified in previous non-rotating 3D pre-supernova models. Governed by such a convection pattern, the angle-averaged specific angular momentum becomes constant in the Si/O convective layer, which is not considered in spherically symmetrical stellar evolution models. Such spiral arms and constant specific angular momentum might affect the ensuing explosion or implosion of the star.
KW - convection
KW - hydrodynamics
KW - stars: massive
KW - stars: rotation
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U2 - 10.1093/mnrasl/slab067
DO - 10.1093/mnrasl/slab067
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85112195736
SN - 1745-3925
VL - 506
SP - L20-L25
JO - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters
JF - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters
IS - 1
ER -