Simulated 3D 56Ni Distributions of Type IIp Supernovae

Abstract

We present the first three-dimensional study of the asymptotic ejecta distributions for a suite of theoretical Type IIp supernovae originating from red supergiant progenitors. We simulate using the radiation-hydrodynamic code Fornax from core bounce through the first seconds of the neutrino-driven explosion and then follow using a hydrodynamic variant of the code FLASH until shock breakout of the star and through to homologous expansion of the ejecta into the circumstellar environment. Our studied progenitor models range from 9 to 25 M, with explosion energies spanning 0.1-1 Bethe. The shock breakout times span the range 1-4 days, with a breakout time spread by direction ranging from hours to over a day. We find that the dipole orientation of the 56Ni ejecta is well-preserved from the first seconds out to shock breakout. The 56Ni ejecta penetrates through the initially outer oxygen shell, and its global structure is imprinted with small-scale clumping as the ejecta evolve through the stellar envelope. For the majority of our models, the neutron star kick is anti-aligned with the 56Ni ejecta. Models with strongly dipolar ejecta morphology and a massive hydrogen/helium envelope with an inner boundary located deep see as much as 70\% of the 56Ni ejecta mixed into that outer envelope, reaching asymptotic velocities ranging from 350 to 3200 km s-1. Supernovae arising from red supergiant progenitors and exhibiting prominent nickel features generally display significant 56Ni mixing into the stellar envelope.

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