Supernova, fluid instabilities, and interfacial mixing

ORAL

Abstract

Supernovae and their remnants are a central problem in astrophysics due to their role in the stellar evolution and nuclear synthesis. A supernova’s explosion is driven by a blast wave causing the development of Rayleigh–Taylor and Richtmyer–Meshkov instabilities and leading to intensive interfacial mixing of materials of a progenitor star. Rayleigh–Taylor and Richtmyer–Meshkov mixing breaks spherical symmetry of a star and provides conditions for synthesis of heavy mass elements in addition to light mass elements synthesized in the star before its explosion. By focusing on hydrodynamic aspects of the problem, we identify the properties of Rayleigh–Taylor and Richtmyer–Meshkov dynamics with variable acceleration, discover subdiffusive character of the blast wave-induced interfacial mixing, and reveal the new mechanism of energy accumulation and transport at small scales in supernovae.

*The work is supported by the University of Western Australia (AUS) via project grant 10101047, and the National Science Foundation (USA) via award 1404449.

Presenters

  • Annie Naveh

    • Univ of Western Australia

Authors

  • Snezhana Abarzhi

    • Univ of Western Australia
  • Aklant Bhowmick

    • Carnegie Mellon University
  • Annie Naveh

    • Univ of Western Australia
  • Arun Pandian

    • Carnegie Mellon University
  • Robert F Stellingwerf

    • Stellingwerf Consulting
  • David Arnett

    • University of Arizona