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The Storyline of the Project: How to turn this… …into this! 1: Before and after pictures of SN1987a. E. MyraFigure & D. Swesty 11/9/2004 Supercomputing 2004 Chapter 6 Core-collapse Supernovae 6.1 Infall phase We begin with a massive star, in excess of 10 solar masses, burning the hydrogen in its core under the conditions of hydrostatic equilibrium. When the hydrogen is exhausted, the core contracts until the density and temperature are reached where 3α →12 C can take place. The He is then burned to exhaustion. The pattern, fuel exhaustion, contraction, and ignition of the ashes of the previous burning cycle repeats several time, leading finally to the explosive burning of 28 Si to Fe. For a heavy star, the evolution is rapid: the star has to work harder to maintain the hotter electron gas necessary to sustain itself against its own gravity, and therefore consumes its fuel faster. Likewise, as the star contracts to higher density after each burning stage, and because the energy liberated in late-stage burning cycles is modest (see below), the evolution accelerates as the star progresses to later stages. A 25 solar mass star would go through all of these cycles in about 7 My, with the final explosion Si burning stages taking a few days. The resulting ”onion skin” structure of the precollapse star is shown in Figure 2. Note that one can read off the nuclear history of the star by looking from the surface inward. 1 apse urning lighter ear fusion, nts ce elements hich then e structure ely heavier H He He C,O C Ne,Mg O S,Si S,Si Fe Fe ogresses s becomes es the core elf against collapses Figure 2: Qualitative depiction of the onionskin structure to which a massive star, above a & D. Swesty 11/9/2004 Supercomputing 2004 about 8 solar masses, evolves. Core collapse is initiated when the inert iron core, augmented by continuing silicon burning, reaches the Chandrasekar mass. 2 The source of energy for this evolution is nuclear binding energy. A plot of the nuclear binding energy as a function of nuclear mass shows that the minimum is achieved at Fe. In a scale where the 12 C mass is picked as zero: 12 C δ/nucleon = 0.000 MeV O δ/nucleon = -0.296 MeV 28 Si δ/nucleon = -0.768 MeV 40 Ca δ/nucleon = -0.871 MeV 56 Fe δ/nucleon = -1.082 MeV 72 Ge δ/nucleon = -1.008 MeV 98 Mo δ/nucleon = -0.899 Mev 16 where δ is the nuclear binding energy relative to C. This defines the energy available from burning carbon through iron, about 1 MeV. (Recall the energy liberated in burning protons to He was about 6.5 MeV per nucleon.) Once the Si burns to produce Fe, there is no further source of nuclear energy adequate to support the star. So as the last remnants of nuclear burning take place, the core is largely supported by degeneracy pressure, with the energy generation rate in the core being less than the stellar luminosity. The core density is about 2 ×109 g/cc and the temperature is kT ∼ 0.5 MeV. As the Fe core, as it grows, cannot produce nuclear energy to sustain equilibrium, the possibility for stable evolution is support by degeneracy pressure. We have encountered a situation like this before: we previously discussed solar-mass-like red giants with degenerate He cores, prior to He ignition. The current situation is different, in that we are envision a massive star, perhaps 25M . We also have a core that is growing, as the ashes of Si burning are added to the Fe core. Thus we need to determine whether anything interesting happens, and if so, at what core mass? We can return to the Lane-Emden equation to try to answer this. We started with an EoS p(r) = kρ(r)γ (1) We introduced a function Φ(r) = ρ(r) ρ0 !γ−1 = p(r) p0 ! γ−1 γ (2) which was found to satisfy 1 d2 Φ(x) 2 dΦ(x) + + Φ(x) γ−1 = 0. 2 dx x dx (3) The boundary conditions were Φ0 (0) = 0 Φ(0) = 1 (4) and x ≡ r/rx where " p0 γ rx = 4πGρ20 (γ − 1) 3 #1/2 (5) The radius of the star is defined at the point where Φ(x) vanishes: that’s where the pressure and density vanish. Previously we solved for this surface coordinate for γ = 4/3, which we showed was an appropriate choice for the Sun. What is the appropriate γ for our present situation? First the number density of electrons is ne = kF3 where ρ = ne mN µe 3π 2 h̄3 (6) where the molecular weight µe = A/Z ∼ 2 and where we observe that all of the mass is in nucleons (Fe). Solving this, we find the kF > me for ρ > 106 g/cm3 . But the density at the mass of the Si zone in such a star is typically ∼ 2 · 107 . So we know the electron gas is relativistic Now in the present case, we are interested in the iron core, so we recognize that the gas pressure will be dominated by electrons, as the electron/ion ratio is large. Since the gas is relativistic p = /3, so 8π Z kF 3 k2 1 4 2(4π) Z kF 2 q k dk → k dk = k p= 3 3 3(2π) 0 3(2π) 0 12π 2 F k 2 + m2e But we also know kF = (3π 2 ne )1/3 = 3π 2 ρ mN µe (7) !1/3 (8) Consequently 1 p= 12π 2 So we find NA p = 0.773 µe 3π 2 ρ MN µe !4/3 !4/3 ρ g/cm3 (9) !4/3 cm−4 h̄c (10) or equivalently p = kρ4/3 where k = 0.776 · 1021 µe−4/3 cm MeV/g4/3 (11) So a relativistic Fermi gas is also an n = 3 (γ = 4/3) polytrope. That is, we have already solved this problem. Specifically we found Φ(x) = 0 ⇒ x = 6.89685 (12) which defines the surface as " p0 γ Rs ≡ 6.89685rx = 6.89685 4πGρ20 (γ − 1) #1/2 " = 6.89685 kγ 2/3 4πGρ0 (γ − 1) #1/2 (13) Plugging in the numbers and doing the algebra gives " 2 Rs = 3.35 · 10 km µe 4 4 #2/3 " 106 g/cm3 ρ #1/3 (14) We also solved for the mass last time M = 4πrx3 ρ0 (2.01824) ⇒ M = 1.46M (15) Now note that the mass is independent of ρ0 and Rs . Also note that the higher the density, the smaller Rs . Now we have assume the ultra-relativistic limit. What this tells us is that once the ultra-relativistic part of the iron core reaches a mass above the Chandrasekhar limit, 1.46 M , there can be no stable solution. Now this situation arises in a massive star. As Si burning proceeds to build a larger and larger iron core, finally reaching the Chardrekhar limit, and as the last remnants of burning within that mass turns off, forcing the iron core to support itself henceforth by degeneracy pressure, then we see if that mass exceeds the Chadrasekhar mass, there is no stable solution. The contraction will continue, a core collapse. This happens – core collapse of Ne – for stars above over 11 solar masses. There are also core collapses of a somewhat different type for ONeMg cores of 8-10 M . The collapse alters many of the condition in the core, defining the conditions for the following supernova explosion and neutron star (or black hole). As gravity does work on the matter, the collapse leads to a rapid heating and compression of the matter. As the nucleons in Fe are bound by about 8 MeV, sufficient heating can release αs and a few nucleons. At the same time, the electron chemical potential is increasing. This makes electron capture on nuclei and any free protons favorable e− + p → νe + n (16) Note that the chemical equilibrium condition is µe + µp = µn + hEν i (17) Thus the fact that neutrinos are not trapped plus the rise in the electron Fermi surface as the density increases, lead to increased neutronization of the matter. The escaping neutrino carry off energy and lepton number. Both the electron capture and the nuclear excitation and disassociation takes energy out of the electron gas, which is the star’s only source of support. This means that the collapse is very rapid. Numerical simulations find that the iron core of the star (∼ 1.2-1.5 solar mases) collapses at about 0.6 of the free fall velocity. In the early stages of the infall the νe s readily escape. But neutrinos are trapped when a density of ∼ 1012 g/cm3 is reached. At this point the neutrinos begin to scatter off the matter through both charged current and coherent neutral current processes. The neutral current neutrino scattering off nuclei is particularly important, as the scattering cross section is off the total nuclear weak charge, which is approximately N2 , where N is the neutron number. This process transfers very little energy because the mass energy of the nucleus is so much greater than the typical energy of the neutrinos. But momentum is exchanged. Thus the neutrino “random walks” out of the star. When the neutrino mean free path becomes sufficiently short, the “trapping time” of the neutrino begins to exceed the time scale for the 5 collapse to be completed. This occurs at a density of about 1012 g/cm3 , or somewhat less than 1% of nuclear density. After this point, the energy released by further gravitational collapse and the star’s remaining lepton number are trapped within the star. If we take a neutron star of 1.4 solar masses and a radius of 10 km, a rough estimate of its binding energy is GM 2 ∼ 2.5 × 1053 erg (18) 2R Thus this is roughly the trapped energy that will later be radiated in neutrinos. The trapped lepton fraction YL is a crucial parameter in the explosion physics: a higher trapped YL leads to a larger homologous core, a stronger shock wave, and easier passage of the shock wave through the outer core, as will be discussed below. Most of the lepton number loss of an infalling mass element occurs as it passes through a narrow range of densities just before trapping. The reasons for this are relatively simple: as we have seen in other plasmas, electron capture (and other weak interactions) goes as T 5 . Thus the electron capture rapidly turns on as matter falls toward the trapping radius. So the lepton loss is maximal just prior to trapping. Inelastic neutrino reactions have an important effect on these losses (to be described in detail in class). 6.2 The shock wave The velocity of sound in matter rises with increasing density. The inner homologous core, with a mass MHC ∼ 0.6 − 0.9 solar masses, is that part of the iron core where the sound velocity exceeds the infall velocity. This allows any pressure variations that may develop in the homologous core during infall to even out before the collapse is completed. As a result, the homologous core collapses as a unit, retaining its density profile. That is, if nothing were to happen to prevent it, the homologous core would collapse to a point. A lot of interesting physics occurs as the matter approaches nuclear densities of about 1014 g/cm3 . Nuclear matter goes through a series of phase changes – bubbles, rods, pasta – as nuclei are forced together to form bulk nuclear matter. The physics is governed by the changing minimum-energy state, which depends on Coulomb and nuclear forces and the competition between nuclear volume and surface energies. The collapse of the homologous core continues until nuclear densities are reached. Nuclear matter is rather incompressible (∼ 200 MeV/f3 !) densities of 3-4 times nuclear density are reached, e.g., perhaps 6 · 1014 g/cm3 . The innermost shell of matter reaches this supernuclear density first, rebounds, sending a pressure wave out through the homologous core. This wave travels faster than the infalling matter, as the homologous core is characterized by a sound speed in excess of the infall speed. Subsequent shells follow. The resulting series of pressure waves collect near the sonic point (the edge of the homologous core). As this point reaches nuclear density and comes to rest, a shock wave breaks out and begins its traversal of the outer core. That is, the shock wave forms at the boundary of the homologous core, the point 6 where supersonic becomes subsonic. Initially the shock wave may carry an order of magnitude more energy than is needed to eject the mantle of the star (less than 1051 ergs). But as the shock wave travels through the outer iron core, it heats and melts the iron that crosses the shock front, at a loss of ∼ 8 MeV/nucleon, reversing the effects of all prior stages of quiescent stellar burning. The net drain of energy from the shock wave is about 1051 ergs for every 0.1 solar masses disassociated. So clearly the shock is in trouble if it has to transverse on the order of a solar mass of material before ejecting the mantle. The enhanced electron capture that occurs off the free protons left in the wake of the shock, coupled with the sudden reduction of the neutrino opacity of the matter (recall σcoherent ∼ N 2 ), greatly accelerates neutrino emission. This is another energy loss. [Many numerical models predict a strong “breakout” burst of νe s in the few milliseconds required for the shock wave to travel from the edge of the homologous core to the neutrinosphere at ρ ∼ 1012 g/cm3 and r ∼ 50 km. See Figure 4. The neutrinosphere is the term from the neutrino trapping radius, or surface of last scattering.] The summed losses from shock wave heating and neutrino emission are comparable to the initial energy carried by the shock wave. Thus most numerical models fail to produce a successful “prompt” hydrodynamic explosion. Consequently the shock wave stalls in the outer iron core, before it reaches the point just outside the iron core where the shock can (in principle) deliver enough energy to the matter to lift it off the star. Note that the supernova problem is entirely one of energy transfer: all matter in the star was initially bound. Thus the energy released by the core in falling deep into a gravitational potential must be transfered to the mantle to create an explosion. As we see below, experts have not yet figured out how to make this transfer sufficiently efficient. Dissipation by shock-wave heating of matter and by neutrino emission reduce the efficiency of energy transfer by the shock wave. Two explosion mechanisms were seriously considered in the last 20 years. In the prompt mechanism described above, the shock wave is sufficiently strong to survive the passage of the outer iron core with enough energy to blow off the mantle of the star. The most favorable results were achieved with smaller stars (less than 15 solar masses) where there is less overlying iron, and with soft equations of state, which produce a more compact neutron star and thus lead to more energy release. In part because of the lepton number loss problems discussed earlier, now it is widely believed that this mechanism fails for all but unrealistically soft nuclear equations of state. The delayed mechanism begins with a failed hydrodynamic explosion; after about 0.01 seconds the shock wave stalls at a radius of 200-300 km. It exists in sort of equilibrium, gaining energy from matter falling across the shock front, but loosing energy to the heating of that material. However, after perhaps 0.5 sec, the shock wave is revived due to neutrino heating of the nucleon “soup” left in the wake of the shock. This heating comes primarily from 7 charged current reactions off the nucleons in that nucleon gas; quasielastic scattering also increases the energy transfer. This heated gas may reach 2 MeV in temperature; it has a very high entropy. Thus the energy is in the radiation, not the matter. The pressure exerted by this gas, perhaps augmented by convection, helps to push the shock outward. It is important to note that there are limits to how effective this neutrino energy transfer can be in one-dimensional models: if matter is too far from the core, the coupling to neutrinos is too weak to deposite significant energy. If too close, the matter may be at a temperature (or soon reach a temperature) where neutrino emission cools the matter as fast or faster than neutrino absorption heats it. It the parlance of the field, one hears the work “gain radius” to describe the region where useful heating is done. Convection, however, can get around such limits, as will be discussed in class in more detail. This subject is still very controversial and unclear. The problem is extremely difficult numerical, challenging modelers to handle the difficult hydrodynamics of a shock wave; the complications of the nuclear equation of state at densities not yet accessible to experiment; modeling in two or three dimensions that is necessary for understanding convection; handling the slow diffusion of neutrinos; etc. Not all of these aspects can be handled reasonably at the same time, even with existing supercomputers. Thus there is considerable disagreement about whether we have any supernova model that succeeds in ejecting the mantle. There are some crude formulas that are often quite useful in working out factor-of-two estimates for explosion properties. For example, as we have mentioned that the collapse dynamics approaches (∼ 0.6) that of free-fall, we can make a rough dimensional estimate of the collapse time s 0.6 M 1/2 3/2 r3 1 (19) ∼ 102 r10 s, τcoll ∼ α 2GM α M where α ∼ 0.6 is the ratio of the infall velocity to the free-fall velocity, M ∼ 2.4–33 M is the mass enclosed within r (the range represents what one gets by examining progenitors from ∼ 10 M to ∼ 75 M ), and r10 is r in units of 1010 cm. So r10 ∼ 1 is quite far out in most progenitors, perhaps the outer He shell, and for such shells the dynamic time scale for collapse is much longer than, for example, the neutron star cooling time. The shock wave heats the material. We can make a rough estimate of this, as a function of the shock wave energy. The physical picture is that the shock wave energy declines relatively steeply, so that at radius r most of its energy has been dissipated in the heating of the nucleon or nuclear gas left in its wake. That energy goes primarily into radiation: if one works out the energy in the photon gas at the temperatures produced in a supernova, the entropy per baryon is typically on the order of 50-100 Boltzmann units. Thus we can equate the energy of a radiation-dominated ball of radius r to the initial shock wave energy. One finds 1/4 −3/4 Tp,8 ∼ 2.37E50 r10 . (20) Here T8 denotes temperature in units of 108 K. A natural comparison is of this peak heating temperature with the temperature of material before the shock wave passes. That material 8 Convection Occurs…. E. Myra & D. Swesty 11/9/2004 Supercomputing 2004 Figure 3: A two-D simulation by Myra and Swesty, involving both hydrodynamics and treatment of energy and lepton number transport by diffusing neutrinos, showing the development of convection. 9 had a temperature consistent with hydrostatic equilibrium. One finds typically that the shock wave increases the material by a factor of two or three. This is a big deal for exponentially suppressed nuclear rates, and means that significant additional nuclear burning is triggered by shock wave passage. The time of shock arrival can also be estimated, M − MNS τsh ∼ 21.8 M !1/2 r10 1/2 E50 s, (21) This comes from the so-called Sedov solution of a spherical blast wave propagating through a uniform medium. One notes that in the inner mantle – say the O and C zones of a supernova where the radius is on the order of 109 cm – the shock wave arrives on the order of two seconds. So this is comparable to the neutrino e-folding time of roughly 3 seconds, and means that if we are interested in neutrino physics (oscillations, or neutrino-induced nucleosynthesis) we might need to worry about two epochs, before and after shock wave arrival. For example, the MSW potential depends on density. With the same 1) physical picture of shock wave heating – a ball of heated gas that therefore exerts pressure; 2) an estimate of the ambient pressure of the gas before shock wave arrival – this is given by hydrostatic equilibrium, so can be easily derived from the gravitational constant and the radiusl and 3) using some reasonable number for the compressibility of the matter at typical densities of, say, 106 g/cm3 , one can estimate the degree to which the matter compresses due to shock wave passages. A typical number is a factor of 7. So this is a big deal both in terms of reaction rates (two-body reactions track linearly with density) and the MSW potential. The compresses on a timescale comparable to τsh . I should mention the term “mass cut”. This describes the bifurcation point of the star. Below the mass cut, matter falls into the neutron star (or black hole). Outside the mass cut, matter is ejected. Just above the mass cut, the matter is a very high entropy nucleon gas that is blown off the star by neutrinos, or the “neutrino wind.” We will have a homework problem on this wind. 6.3 Neutrinos However the explosion proceeds, there is agreement that 99% of the 3 ·1053 ergs released in the collapse is radiated in neutrinos of all flavors. The time scale over which the trapped neutrinos leak out of the protoneutron star is about 3 seconds. (Fits to SN1987A give, assuming an exponential cooling e−t/τ , τ ∼ 4.5 sec.) Through most of their migration out of the protoneutron star, the neutrinos are in flavor equilibrium, e.g., νe + ν¯e ↔ νµ + ν¯µ (22) As a result, there is an approximate equipartition of energy among the neutrino flavors. After weak decoupling, the νe s and ν¯e s remain in equilibrium with the matter for a brief 10 time due to scattering off electrons and, especially, the charged current reactions νe + n ↔ p + e− ν¯e + p ↔ n + e+ (23) As a result, the heavy flavor neutrinos decouple from the matter first, at a somewhat higher temperature. Typical calculations yield Tνµ ∼ Tντ ∼ 6 − 8 MeV Tνe ∼ 3 − 3.5 MeV Tν¯e ∼ 3.5 − 4.5 MeV (24) The difference between the νe and ν¯e temperatures is a result of the neutron richness of the matter, which enhances the reactions of the νe s, thereby keeping them coupled to the matter to a larger, cooler radius. This temperature hierarchy is crucially important to nucleosynthesis (we will see this when we look at the r-process) and also to possible neutrino oscillation scenarios. The three-flavor MSW level-crossing diagram is shown in Figure 6. One very popular scenario attributes the solar neutrino problem to νµ − νe transmutation; this means that a second crossing with a ντ could occur at higher density. It turns out plausible seasaw mass patterns suggest a ντ mass on the order of a few eV, which would be interesting cosmologically. The second crossing would then occur outside the neutrino sphere, that is, after the neutrinos have decoupled and have fixed spectra with the temperatures given above. Thus a νe − ντ oscillation would produce a distinctive T ∼ 8 MeV spectrum of νe s. This has dramatic consequences for terrestrial detection and for nucleosynthesis in the supernova. 6.4 Convection A current terascale computing grand challenge is 2D modeling to explore the possibility that convection is might help achieve explosions. There is substantial evidence from SN1987A and other supernovae that convection occurs during the explosion: explosion asymmetry, early emission of x-rays and γ rays, and outward mixing of 56 Ni. Simulations, such as those illustrated in Fig 3, show the development of convection as high-entropy material, heated from below by neutrinos, rises and is replaced by cooler mater from above. 6.5 The light curve Well after the explosion, observers can measure the light emitted by the supernova. At late times mich of the observed power comes from radioactive species synthesized in the explosion. Figure 7 shows isotopes that we believe contribute to the light curve. One exciting, very recent result is the identification of a supernova remnant, about 300 years old, in our galaxy due to observation of the gamma ray line from 44 Ti. This line was previously seen in a known supernova remnant (Cass A). The second source has no optical counterpart in the historical record. 11 34 Figure 4: A simulation of the very-early neutrino flux from a core-collapse supernova. The F IG . 17.— Lν , Lν̄ , and Lν in units of 1053 erg s−1 at infinity for κ = 180 (dotted lines) and κ = 375 (solid lines). spike in the deleptonization or breakout burst, dominantly νe s. Production of energetic neutrinos of all flavors continues for several seconds: the flux declines with a time constant of two or three seconds, models predict. From Burrows et al. e e µ 12 Figure C.12: The IMB and Kamioka neutrino events from SN1987A. Figure 5: The direct detection of supernova neutrinos is so far limited to a handful of events F.2 recorded by Neutrinos: the IBM Current and Kamioka detectors during These detectors are Supernova and Future Observatories. TheSN1987A. most important overwhelmingly sensitive to anti-electron neutrinos because of the charged-current consideration in preparing for the next galactic supernova is to appreciate that an opportunityabsorption itself once in a protons lifetime: the estimate of the galactic supernova frequency is 1/30y. of thesepresents neutrinos on free inbest water. There are two consequences. First, we need to be prepared at all times with detectors capable of measuring the spectrum, including the flavor and time development, of the next supernova, which could occur at any time. The minimum requirements are detectors operating in both charge-current modes as well as some scheme for measuring neutral current interactions. Second, most (though not all) supernova observatories are likely to be detectors with additional physics goals, such as proton decay or solar neutrinos. Thus a theme of this field is the “supernova watch” – the notion that we should try to coordinate the world’s program of underground neutrino detectors to guarantee that the necessary supernova capability is always in place. Directional sensitivity is also important, as this could help optical observers locate the supernova quickly. Detectors exploiting elastic scattering off electrons provide some directional information. Another possibility, if several detectors are able to measure enough events to determine the turn-on time of the neutrino pulse to millisecond accuracy (or if the deleptonization burst could be used as a clock), is to determine the direction by triangulation. 13 A-55 e m eff e e 12 3 10 g/cm density vacuum Figure 14: Three-flavor neutrino level-crossing diagram. One popular scenario associates the Figure 6: depiction of with theνethree-flavor oscillation MSW crossings.interested The larger δ m2 solarAneutrino problem ↔ νµ oscillations and predicts a cosmologically massive νcrossing ντ oscillations near the supernova neutrinosphere. τ with νe ↔ atmospheric-neutrino occurs at a density of about 104 g/cm3 . This places the crossing, for typical supernova neutrino energies, near the base of the convective zone. This is outside where interesting explosion However, this estimate igarethe notradius produced in sufficient amounts in thephysics big bangoccurs. or in any of the stellar nores a new contribution to discussed. the MSW The potential, neutrino scattering thecosmic trapped neutrino mechanisms we have traditional explanation has off been sea. The of this new potential onand theNlocation of the crossing rayeffects spallation interactions with C, O, in the interstellar medium. point In thisis still being picture, cosmic ray protons collide with C at relatively high energy, knocking investigated. the nucleus apart. So in the debris one can find nuclei like 10 B, 11 B, and 7 Li. But there are some problems with this picture. First of all, this is an example of a secondary mechanism: the interstellar medium must be enriched in the C, O, and N to provide the targets for these reactions. Thus cosmic ray spallation must become more effective as the galaxy ages. The abundance of boron, for example, would tend to grow quadratically with metallicity, since the rate of production goes linearly with metallicity. But observations, especially recent measurements with the HST, find a linear growth 49 in the boron abundance. A second problem is that the spectrum of cosmic ray protons peaks near 14 52 Figure 7: The nuclear decays thought to power the early light curve of a Type II supernova. 15 Explosive nucleosynthesis Shell-Structured Evolved Massive Star Gravitational Core Collapse Supernova Shock Wave ν ν ν ν ν ν ν ν ν ν ν ν Shock Region Explosive Nucleosynthesis ν ν ν ν ν ν ν ν ν ν Proto-Neutron Star Neutrino Heating of Shock Region from Inside XXXVIII Rencontres de Moriond: Radiactive Beams for Nuclear Physics and Neutrino Physics ν ν Neutrino reactions in astrophysics – p. 10 Figure 8: A cartoon summary of the physics described in this chapter. The final frame, a high-entropy neutron-rich nucleon gas expanded off the star, defines the initial conditions for interesting nucleosynthesis – such as the r-process, which we will discuss soon. From Martinez-Pinedo. 16