| High-entropy ejecta plumes in Cassiopeia A from neutrino-driven convection | |
| Article | |
| 关键词: CORE-COLLAPSE SUPERNOVAE; RAYLEIGH-TAYLOR INSTABILITIES; 3-DIMENSIONAL STRUCTURE; NUCLEOSYNTHESIS; TI-44; SIMULATIONS; EXPLOSIONS; REMNANT; ABUNDANCES; EVOLUTION; | |
| DOI : 10.1038/s41586-021-03391-9 | |
| 来源: SCIE | |
【 摘 要 】
Recent multi-dimensional simulations suggest that high-entropy buoyant plumes help massive stars to explode(1,2). Outwardly protruding iron (Fe)-rich fingers of gas in the galactic supernova remnant(3,4) Cassiopeia A seem to match this picture. Detecting the signatures of specific elements synthesized in the high-entropy nuclear burning regime (that is, alpha-rich freeze out) would constitute strong substantiating evidence. Here we report observations of such elements-stable titanium (Ti) and chromium (Cr)-at a confidence level greater than 5 standard deviations in the shocked high-velocity Fe-rich ejecta of Cassiopeia A. We found that the observed Ti/Fe and Cr/Fe mass ratios require alpha-rich freeze out, providing evidence of the existence of the high-entropy ejecta plumes that boosted the shock wave at explosion. The metal composition of the plumes agrees well with predictions for strongly neutrino-processed proton-rich ejecta(2,5,6). These results support the operation of the convective supernova engine via neutrino heating in the supernova that produced Cassiopeia A.
【 授权许可】
Free