Date
October 25 (Fri) at 14:00 - 15:15, 2024 (JST)
Speaker
  • Thomas Maunder (Ph.D. Student, Department of Astronomy, Monash University, Australia)
Venue
  • via Zoom
Language
English
Host
Shigehiro Nagataki

The explosion mechanism of supernovae is not yet fully understood. In order to better understand the inner-workings of the explosion we need to be able to test our models with observations. Current hydrodynamic simulations of stellar explosions often do not provide photometry or spectroscopy as this requires a treatment of the radiation transport of the ejecta. This project takes hydrodynamic simulations of Type Ib/c (stripped-envelope) supernovae and then performs Monte Carlo Radiative Transport simulations on the ejecta to obtain results we can compare with observations. We choose stripped-envelope supernovae because the lack of Hydrogen shell provides a more direct view into the core and the asymmetries of the explosion mechanism. Through these comparisons between models and observations we can improve our understanding of the explosion mechanism in core-collapse supernovae.

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