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Hauptverfasser: Calvert, David, Redle, Michael, Gautam, Bibek, Stapleford, Charles J., Fröhlich, Carla, Kneller, James P., Liebendorfer, Matthias
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2025
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.16755
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author Calvert, David
Redle, Michael
Gautam, Bibek
Stapleford, Charles J.
Fröhlich, Carla
Kneller, James P.
Liebendorfer, Matthias
author_facet Calvert, David
Redle, Michael
Gautam, Bibek
Stapleford, Charles J.
Fröhlich, Carla
Kneller, James P.
Liebendorfer, Matthias
contents It is understood in a general sense that turbulent fluid motion below the shock front in a core-collapse supernova stiffens the effective equation of state of the fluid and aids in the revival of the explosion. However, when one wishes to be precise and quantify the amount of turbulence in a supernova simulation, one immediately encounters the problem that turbulence is difficult to define and measure. Using the 3D magnetohydrodynamic code ELEPHANT, we study how different definitions of turbulence change one's conclusions about the amount of turbulence in a supernova and the extent to which it helps the explosion. We find that, while all the definitions of turbulence we use lead to a qualitatively similar growth pattern over time of the turbulent kinetic energy in the gain region, the total amount of turbulent kinetic energy, and especially the ratios of turbulent to total kinetic energy, distinguish them. Some of the definitions appear to indicate turbulence is a necessary contributor to the explosion, and others indicate it is not. The different definitions also produce turbulence maps with different correlations with maps of the enstrophy, a quantity widely regarded as also indicating the presence of turbulence. We also compute the turbulent adiabatic index and observe that in regions of low enstrophy, this quantity is sensitive to the definition used. As a consequence, the effective adiabatic index depends upon the method used to measure the turbulence and thus alter one's conclusions regarding the impact of turbulence within the supernova.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2511_16755
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Turbulence in Core-Collapse Supernovae
Calvert, David
Redle, Michael
Gautam, Bibek
Stapleford, Charles J.
Fröhlich, Carla
Kneller, James P.
Liebendorfer, Matthias
High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
It is understood in a general sense that turbulent fluid motion below the shock front in a core-collapse supernova stiffens the effective equation of state of the fluid and aids in the revival of the explosion. However, when one wishes to be precise and quantify the amount of turbulence in a supernova simulation, one immediately encounters the problem that turbulence is difficult to define and measure. Using the 3D magnetohydrodynamic code ELEPHANT, we study how different definitions of turbulence change one's conclusions about the amount of turbulence in a supernova and the extent to which it helps the explosion. We find that, while all the definitions of turbulence we use lead to a qualitatively similar growth pattern over time of the turbulent kinetic energy in the gain region, the total amount of turbulent kinetic energy, and especially the ratios of turbulent to total kinetic energy, distinguish them. Some of the definitions appear to indicate turbulence is a necessary contributor to the explosion, and others indicate it is not. The different definitions also produce turbulence maps with different correlations with maps of the enstrophy, a quantity widely regarded as also indicating the presence of turbulence. We also compute the turbulent adiabatic index and observe that in regions of low enstrophy, this quantity is sensitive to the definition used. As a consequence, the effective adiabatic index depends upon the method used to measure the turbulence and thus alter one's conclusions regarding the impact of turbulence within the supernova.
title Turbulence in Core-Collapse Supernovae
topic High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.16755