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Thermonuclear supernovae and cosmology Andrey Zhiglo Kharkov Institute of Physics and Technology Dark matter, dark energy and their detection 2013 NSU, Novosibirsk 23 July 2013 1 Talk outline • Supernovae: overview • Classification, observations, phenomenology • Stellar evolution. Stellar models • SNIa: Thermonuclear supernovae. Theory • Core-collapse supernovae: theory 2 Overview: history SN = Supernova = Super[bright] nova [ = “new star”: fast drastic increase in brightness: by ~20m in ~3 weeks]. Brightest (optical band) stellar-mass objects in the Universe. In our Galaxy: in 185AD; 1054 (visible in daylight for 23 days, 653 days at night with naked eye. Remnant: M1, = “Crab” nebula); 1572 (“Tycho”. Brahe recorded light curve, book “De Stella Nova”); 1604 (Kepler) – last one seen in our Galaxy. S Andromedae 1885 – first reliable distance to host M31 estimate by Baade&Zwicky, term “Supernova” (not a typical Nova; brighter) by Zwicky in 1931. ~6m peak brightness. Before 1990: <~30 SNe found each year. 2012: >5000 SNe known, surveys find hundreds SNe a year; new dedicated surveys under way. Most distant SNIa: z=1.914 (10Gyr. 04/13: CANDELS, HST). 3 ~3 SNe/century should occur in the Galaxy.Names: SN2006jc Overview: history; brightness Historic SNe were noticed by naked eye: anomaly on the sky. SN1006 ~ –7.5m (visible in daylight), SN1987A (in LMC) +2.9m peak magnitude. S And ~6m. Absolute magnitude: average SNIa M= –19.3 at maximum light, ~20÷25m (factor of 108÷10) brighter than its progenitor. Milky Way: M= –20.5. Average classical nova: –8.8M . Max brightness variation in Mira-type variable stars is 11m (o Ceti: 8m: 2m to 10m – 1st variable star discovered, 1638). SN classification: spectral: Minkowski’1941: Type II and I (H lines, no H). Elias+’1985: SNIa (SiII lines). Further subdivision progresses: SNIa classified into Branch-normal (BFN’93; SN1991bg-like), 90% of total; SN1991t-like (~9%: fast decline, low amount of Si-group elements), SN2000cn-like, SN2001ay-like, Hyper-Chandra. Similar 1-parameter properties in 1st&2nd groups; → way to guess their absolute 4 brightness- best to date cosmological distance determination. Normal SN Ia: average rise time ~17.5 days (B-band), peak absolute magnitude M= –19.3 , decline by ~ 3m within ~ 20 days, then ~ 1m /month. 5 From Filippenko ARAA 1997 [From Trimble (1982)] a B 6 From [Turatto 2003] 7 P Cygni profile 8 Zwicky (1938) model: collapse into Neutron Star. First 35 SNe studied were Ia. Minkowski (1940): types I & II – after discovery of SN1940c. Also Type II: SN1054 & SN1181. Hoyle&Fowler (1960): thermonuclear explosion of a White Dwarf (WD) star. Colgate&McKee (1969), Truran: SNIa light curve powered by beta-decay 6d d 56 56 Ni Co 77 56 Fe Khokhlov (1995): First 3D simulations of SNIa From [Weiler 2003] 9 SN Ia, in NGC 4526, 108x106 LY from Earth. Peak magnitude +15.2m 10 SN Ib (corecollapse) in UGC 4904, 77x106 LY From Earth. Progenitor: Bright blue giant, spectral class O, luminosity class II. 11 Remnant of SN1006, Ia, 7000 LY away. SN1006 was observed by Arab, Chinese, Japanese astronomers. ~–7.5m peak brightness. Image 55’ across. Nearly spherical, radial stratification in chemistry, density, velocity. 12 Remnant of SN1572 “Tycho”, Ia, 13000 LY from Earth. SN1572 was studied by Tycho Brahe, among others. He recorded its light curve. Book “De Stella Nova”. Image 10.5’ across. 13 Crab nebula, M1. Remnant of SN1054, type II, 6500 LY from Earth. Pronounced filamentary structure, intricate small scale features. SN1054 peak magnitude 14 ~–6m Overview: energetics Characteristic energy of SN explosion E~(1÷2)x1051 erg. Mostly kinetic energy of expanding ejecta. SNIa: completely disrupted: average expansion v = (2E/M)1/2 =~8000 km/s Energy of EM emission in SNIa ~ 6x1049 erg, mostly optical and IR; ~1049 erg in SNII. Progenitor mass ~ a few solar masses, M☼=1.989x1033 g. M☼c2=1.8x1054 erg. Energy of 4p → 4He+26.72MeV burning of M☼~12.8x1051 erg. Burning 1M☼ 12C → 56Ni: ~6.5x1051 erg. Gravitational binding energy of C+O WD ~0.6x1051 erg. The Sun energy output: 1.2x1041 erg/yr. Energy carried away by neutrinos and antineutrinos in corecollapse supernova (ccSN): ~(3÷5)x1053 erg =~10÷15% MFec2. 15 SN Ia emission: double beta decay ~0.6 M☼ 56Ni → 56Fe. Emitted e+, γ excite and heat ejecta, that thus emits light from its photosphere. Exponential tail: rad.decay law when the ejecta becomes optically thin. In ccSN: shock heating, H recombination, ~0.02-0.2 M☼ 56Ni → 56Fe. 16 From Filippenko ARAA 1997 From [Nadyozhin & Imshennik (2005)] 17 SNIa: standard candles for cosmology Phillips relation (1993) SNIa – standard candles for cosmology. 10%-accurate brightness. 1% accuracy needed for constraining Dark Energy Equation of state. 18 SNIa: thermonuclear supernovae Mechanism: thermonuclear explosion of carbon-oxygen White Dwarf (WD). 3 channels: 1) Steadily approaches Chandrasekhar mass by accretion, M ~ 1.38MSun , nuclear runaway near center, explosion. C+O → 56Ni, intermediate mass elements (IM), starts as deflagration front, likely transitions to detonation. Similar initial conditions => uniform outcome, favored model for most spectroscopically-normal SNIa. 3D simulations show correct energetics and species distribution in ejecta when detonation is triggered after WD preexpansion in initial deflagration phase, or when many ignition points are used. But too few soft supersoft XR sources. 2) Explosion after collision of 2 low-mass WDs. 3) Detonation of degenerate surface layer of accreted He on 19 <MCh WD. Known progenitor systems produce atypical SNe. Core collapse supernovae Engine: released gravitational energy of collapsing iron core of a massive star, MMS>8 M☼, after the inert core reaching critical mass. The energy is transferred to outer layers by a shock wave, born at infalling matter bounce from stiffened nuclear density core, supported via neutrino heating. Remnant: expanding nebula of IME and iron-group elements, interacting with circumstellar material (CSM)/extended envelope (esp. SNII: rich in H); collapsed core – neutron star (NS) or black hole (BH). Source of heavy elements, cosmic rays, NS and BH, gravitational waves and ~20MeV neutrinos. 20 SN EM emission. Light curves Expanding envelope is heated by SNIa: (e+, γ) of 56Ni beta decay into 56Fe. ccSN: shock heating, H recombination, 56Ni → 56Fe. Envelope becomes optically thinner with time, photosphere recedes to its center. It becomes optically thin eventually. SNIa: total optical depth τ≈30 at max light (t=17 days). Light diffusion time becomes less than expansion time at t=60÷90d, → luminosity ~ instantaneous energy release then, end of fast decline stage. Same t – envelope becomes transparent to γ’s, e+ heating dominates. After t~400d e+ start escaping too; late time LC sensitive to magnetic field (that aids in trapping e+). LC declines slower when more energy is stored in the envelope (more 56Ni): hotter envelope → higher opacity, longer light diffusion and cooling time; both peak brightness and LC width are proportional to m(56Ni) → Phillips relation. 1) Robust within limits; 2) hard to refine underlying physics. 21 Stars with 0.5 M☼ <M<~7-8M☼ burn He → C after H is exhausted in the core, form degenerate C+O core. Stars M>~910M☼ burn nondegenerately C,O, the products to Fe. 22 Evolution tracks. Low mass stars Isolated stars with Mainsequence mass of <~8 M☼ shed H-rich envelope after He ignition, and turn into WDs. [Wheeler et al. 1990] 23 Evolution tracks. Massive stars [Wheeler et al. 1990] 24 [Woosley&Janka (2005)] 25 26 27 Talk outline • • • • • Supernovae: overview Phenomenology and classification Stellar evolution. Stellar models SNIa: Thermonuclear supernovae. Theory Core-collapse supernovae theory 28 SNIa always occurs in a tight binary system, to e–degenerate WD. Favored singledegenerate scenario: ignition near the center of a WD that approached MCh through mass transfer from the companion 29 Instability, to collapse in self grav. field Chandrasekhar limit: degenerate electrons can’t support mass above MCh: P~ρ5/3, R~1/M for nonrelativistic electrons. P~ρ4/3 ,R(MCh)=0 for ultrarelat. e Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff limit for NS mass. 30 Massive C+O WD explosion: basics WD mass grows due to accretion from companion, RG, He or MS. Stable accretion rate between ~5x10-8 and 2x10-6 M☼/yr. Smoldering phase: starts when MWD≈0.99 MCh, RWD≈2200 km: strong convection, fluctuations in T, ρ. Lasts ~ 1000 yr, then nuclear runaway occurs at some ignition point, stable flame. Pressure wave may trigger ignition at several points with suitable conditions almost simultaneously. Multipoint ignition Explosive burning in degenerate matter: sharp increase in T from ~105 to >109 K leads to little expansion (by 17% in 0.5C+0.5O WD at ρ=2x109 g cm–3). Explosion: fast nuclear transformation of original C+O (+traces of Ne, Mg, ...) into heavier elements, in a thin front sweeping through WD. Most energy released within 3 s after the near-center ignition. Disruption, homologous expansion. 31 Deflagration and detonation Nuclear network in the front: →20Ne+4He; reaction rates 12C+ 12C→23Na+p→24Mg, or . Q = 8.4x1010. Products, O → local NSE (Nuclear Statistical Equilibrium) mixture, at . Mostly Fe, Ni at density >~108 g cm–3. Incomplete burning at lower densities. Detonation: fuel heated by compression in the shock front. Pure detonation model of explosion produces too little intermediate mass elements (Si, S, ...), produces mostly Fe, Ni, ...; ruled out. Deflagration: almost isobaric. Fuel preheated by heat conduction from thin reaction zone. Wider preheating zone, still total W < 1 cm. Premixed flame. Near WD center (density ~ 2109 g cm–3) Slam ~ 100 km/s, slower at smaller densities. Deflagration accelerated immensely by flame instabilities, Rayleigh-Taylor dominating at largest scales. 2 6S lam . Pure deflagration 3D model underproduces Ni. cr , RT Ag 32 Laminar flame structure Heat conduction: by degenerate e–. Species diffusion unimportant, Le=~107 [Gamezo et al. 2005] [Calder et al. 2007] 33 Deflagration instabilities Landau-Darrieus instability (LDI): more pronounced at larger expansion 1/ = ρfuel/ρash –1. Critical wavelength of the flame width scale. Nonlinear regime: stabilizes in cellular front shape. [Zhiglo 2009] Rayleigh-Taylor instability (buoyancy) and Kelvin-Helmholtz (shear flow 34 instability) on large scales. Less sensitive to flame structure. SN Ia: Modeling deflagrations Important hydrodynamic scales: from <10–3 cm (flame width near WD center: large ρ, u, etc. across. Kolmogorov scale: Re=1014) to >108 cm (gravity scale; box size). Impossible to disentangle scales: instabilities on lowest scales determine integral burning rate → star expansion → local conditions at the flame, governing instabilities, and burning rate. Gibson scale~ 104 cm, numerical resolution 5x104 cm. Early simulations of 70s-early 90s: 1D spherical, DDT by hand. Current mainstream 3D simulations: simplified physics (no rotation, magnetic fields). Attempts to track flame zone without resolving actual flame, to reproduce on large resolved scales average flame zone propagation, and correct heat release rate. Method: 1) Physics: Detailed nuclear network computed once with no hydro, yields Dlam. Renormalized for unresolved scales effective flame speed, Df (Δ).-To account for the fact that real flame area cannot be directly estimated in simulations with crude grid scale. 2) Numerics: technique to propagate the flame zone with such renormalized speed. 35 Steady RT-enhanced burning in 2D; quasiperiodic Density distribution approximately linear in the flame brush (on average) 36 RT-enhanced burning in 2D, various Df [Zhang et al (2007)] 37 RT-enhanced burning in 3D, various Df [Zhang et al (2007)] 38 39 Flame models. Numerical artifacts ( f ) (uf ) ( Kf ) ( f , T ) t T 1 q uT ( T ) ( f , T ) t cp Reaction-diffusion equations governing reaction progress variable f, coupled to Euler equations for matter velocity, stellar EOS (degenerate electronpositron gas, photons, ideal ion gas, with electron screening, Coulomb corrections). Flame model exhibits its own Landau-Darrieus instability, generates noise. The artifacts must not obscure real physics. 40 Detonation triggered by hand at certain point, at t=1.62 s (left) and t=1.51 s (right). The computational domain size xmax = 5.35x108 cm. Pure deflagration model leads to weak explosion (E=0.8x1051 erg), sunk fingers of nonprocessed C and O near WD center, in conflict with observations. [Gamezo et al 2005] 41 [Jordan IV, et al, 2008] 42 43 Gravitationally confined detonation model [Meakin+, 2009] When ignited off-center (40 km in the simulation shown) the bubble of burnt material is buoyantly driven to the surface, while the WD expands due to nuclear heat released. After breakout a surface wave is generated, that collides at the opposite pole, creating suitable conditions for detonation. 44 ~1.1 M☼ of 56Ni produced, 0.08-0.14 M☼ of IME. Mostly IME at v>14000 km/s. SNIa: conclusions SNIa = thermonuclear explosion of a C+O WD. Only happens in tight binary systems, influx of matter from the companion is crucial for all explosion mechanisms. Favored mechanism for spectrally-normal SNIa: single-degenerate scenario. WD mass steadily increases by accretion from the companion, accreted matter steadily burns into C and O on WD surface. When WD mass reaches ~99% MCh a nuclear runaway occurs near WD center, the flame sweeps through the WD in ~2 s. Most fuel burnt into iron-group elements in these 2 s. ~0.1-0.4 M☼ IME formed in outer less dense regions. Burning and WD hydro expansion rate are about the same. This leads to significant dependence of the 56Ni produced on ignition conditions. Both peak luminosity and the width of light curve (powered by 56Ni decay into 56Fe) are about proportional to m(56Ni) → Phillips relation. This rates coincidence, as well as disparate spatial scales of important physics make SNIa simulations extremely challenging. Used simplified models are questionable. Pure deflagration models produce under-energetic explosions, with spectral inconsistencies with observations. Detonation happening at ~1.5 s after ignition make the outcome consistent with observed ensemble of SNIa. Universal robust mechanism for DDT is missing. 45 SNIa: cosmology • Involved procedures for estimating absolute brightness from LC (best stretch), spectra (Δm correction based on multicolor LC shapes – for ISM dust and found systematic low brightness of redder SNIa).Mostly empirical. • Attempts to pinpoint and learn to correct for secondary parameters influencing SNIa brightness. Known: SNIa at higher z were brighter, and residual bias remains after standard Δm correction. Corrections from stellar population in the galaxy (whenever it can be estimated). Theory: evolutionary path and metallicity affect central WD density at ignition and metallicity throughout. At ρcentr >~109 g cm-3 e–-capture rate grows fast, yieding stable 56Fe and 58Ni, less energetic explosion. Metallicity likely affects DDT. Simulations are still controversial. Circumstellar material affects the spectra (e.g. introducing high-velocity features [Gerardy+ 2005]) and could be required to be taken into account; although classical CSM seems insufficient in mass for this [Zhiglo 2011]. Empirics: analyzing multicolor difference LC between pairs of SNIa and statistically finding best functions of the set of the secondary parameters to fit these differences [Hoeflich+, 2013]. 46 Inner part of M1, remnant of Type II SN1054. Wisps of plasma accelerated in gravitational and magnetic fields (~1012 G) of a pulsar. Composite image, Xray+optical; 1.6’ across. 47 Interaction of ejecta of SN1987A (Large Magellanic Cloud) with CSM. 48 SN Type Ib Ic Characteristics Guess at progenitor No hydrogen in spectrum •Absorption near 5700 A, due to He (plus other He lines) •Late-time emissions from O-I, Ca-II Massive stars which has been stripped of H before core collapse? •Wolf-Rayet stars? No hydrogen in spectrum •No helium in spectrum Massive stars stripped of H before core collapse? •WR stars? Late disk galaxy •Late-time spec. emission from O-I, Ca-II H in spectrum, with P-Cygni profile •Light curve has a plateau for 30-90 (plateau) days soon after maxium II-P Massive red supergiant II-L (linear) Hydrogen is spectrum weak or no PCygni profile •Light cure falls linearly after maximum Less massive supergiant? •Lost some of envelope? IIb Hydrogen in spectrum but not much •Helium in spectrum •Late-time spectrum emissions from OI, Ca-II, H Massive stars which has lost MOST of its H envelope (in binary?) II-n H in spectrum, with narrow emission lines on top of broad emission features •Slow decline in light curve at late times Massive star which sits in the middle of massive stellar 49 outflow? [M. Richmond] 50 [Janka (2007)] Rs: Shock radius. Rν: radius of neutrino sphere (where “optical depth” τ=1). Rg: gain radius, above which neutrino heating exceeds neutrino cooling. Neutrinos effectively trapped at ρ>1012 g cm-3. S hock stalls due to energy loss on nuclei dissociation. Revived, 51 52 53 54 55 56