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Published February 20, 2019 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

On the Neutrino Distributions in Phase Space for the Rotating Core-collapse Supernova Simulated with a Boltzmann-neutrino-radiation-hydrodynamics Code

Abstract

With the Boltzmann-radiation-hydrodynamics code, which we have developed to solve numerically the Boltzmann equations for neutrino transfer, the Newtonian hydrodynamics equations, and the Newtonian self-gravity simultaneously and consistently, we simulate the collapse of a rotating core of the progenitor with a zero-age- main-sequence mass of 11.2 M⊙ and a shellular rotation of 1 rad s^(-1) at the center. We pay particular attention in this paper to the neutrino distribution in phase space, which is affected by the rotation. By solving the Boltzmann equations directly, we can assess the rotation-induced distortion of the angular distribution in momentum space, which gives rise to the rotational component of the neutrino flux. We compare the Eddington tensors calculated both from the raw data and from the M1-closure approximation. We demonstrate that the Eddington tensor is determined by complicated interplays of the fluid velocity and the neutrino interactions and that the M1-closure, which assumes that the Eddington factor is determined by the flux factor, fails to fully capture this aspect, especially in the vicinity of the shock. We find that the error in the Eddington factor reaches ~20% in our simulation. This is due not to the resolution but to the different dependence of the Eddington and flux factors on the angular profile of the neutrino distribution function, and hence modification to the closure relation is needed.

Additional Information

© 2019 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2018 October 27; revised 2019 January 11; accepted 2019 January 25; published 2019 February 25. We thank Yu Yamamoto for providing us with a subroutine that calculates internal energy of electrons and positrons. This research used high-performance computing resources of the K-computer and the FX10 of the HPCI system provided by the AICS and the University of Tokyo through the HPCI System Research Project (Project ID: hp160071, hp170031, and hp180111), the Computing Research Center in KEK, JLDG on SINET4 of NII, the Research Center for Nuclear Physics at Osaka University, the Yukawa Institute of Theoretical Physics at Kyoto University, and the Information Technology Center at the University of Tokyo. This work was supported by the Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (26104006, 15K05093, 16H03986), Grant-in-Aid for Innovative Areas (24103006), and Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative areas "Gravitational wave physics and astronomy:Genesis" (17H06357, 17H06365) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), Japan. This work was also partly supported by research programs at K-computer of the RIKEN AICS, HPCI Strategic Program of Japanese MEXT, "Priority Issue on Post-K-computer" (Elucidation of the Fundamental Laws and Evolution of the Universe), and Joint Institute for Computational Fundamental Sciences (JICFus). A.H. was supported in part by the Advanced Leading Graduate Course for Photon Science (ALPS) at the University of Tokyo and Grant-in-Aid for JSPS Research Fellow (JP17J04422). H.N. was supported partially by JSPS Postdoctoral Fellowships for Research Abroad No. 27-348, Caltech through NSF award No. TCAN AST-1333520, and DOE SciDAC4 Grant DE-SC0018297 (subaward 00009650). Software: gnuplot Williams et al. (2013).

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Published - Harada_2019_ApJ_872_181.pdf

Submitted - 1810.12316.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023