학술논문

Collisionless Shocks and TeV Neutrinos before Supernova Shock Breakout from an Optically Thick Wind
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Mon. Not. Roy. Astron. Soc. 449, 3693 (2015)
Subject
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
Language
Abstract
During a supernova explosion, a radiation-dominated shock (RDS) travels through its progenitor. A collisionless shock (CS) is usually assumed to replace it during shock breakout (SB). We demonstrate here that for some realistic progenitors enshrouded in optically thick winds, such as possibly SN 2008D, a CS forms deep inside the wind, soon after the RDS leaves the core, and therefore significantly before SB. The RDS does not survive the transition from the core to the thick wind when the wind close to the core is not sufficiently dense to compensate for the $r^{-2}$ dilution of photons due to shock curvature. This typically happens when the shock velocity is $\lesssim 0.1 {\rm c} \, (\frac{u_{\rm w}}{10\,{\rm km/s}}) (\frac{\dot{M}}{5 \cdot 10^{-4} \, {\rm M}_\odot {\rm /yr}})^{-1} (\frac{r_\ast}{10^{13}\,{\rm cm}})$, where $u_{\rm w}$, $\dot{M}$ and $r_\ast$ are respectively the wind velocity, mass-loss rate and radius of the progenitor star. The radiative CS results in a hard spectrum of the photon flash at breakout, which would produce an X-ray flash. Cosmic ray acceleration would start before SB, for such progenitors. A fraction of secondary TeV neutrinos can reach the observer up to more than ten hours before the first photons from breakout, providing information on the invisible layers of the progenitor.
Comment: 8 pages (2 columns), 2 figures. Accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society