Abstract
We construct models of core-collapse supernovae in one spatial dimension, including rotation, angular momentum transport, and viscous dissipation employing an alpha-prescription. We compare the evolution of a fiducial 11 M_sun non-rotating progenitor with its evolution including a wide range of imposed initial rotation profiles (1.25 <10 ms, shorter than those of most radio pulsars, but similar to those expected theoretically for magnetars at birth. A fraction of the gravitational binding energy of collapse is stored in the free energy of differential rotation. This energy source may be tapped by viscous processes, providing a mechanism for energy deposition that is not strongly coupled to the mass accretion rate through the stalled supernova shock. This effect yields qualitatively new dynamics in models of supernovae. We explore several potential mechanisms for viscosity in the core-collapse environment: neutrino viscosity, turbulent viscosity caused by the magnetorotational instability (MRI), and turbulent viscosity by entropy- and composition-gradient-driven convection. We argue that the MRI is the most effective. We find that for rotation periods in the range P_0
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CITATION STYLE
Thompson, T. A., Quataert, E., & Burrows, A. (2005). Viscosity and Rotation in Core‐Collapse Supernovae. The Astrophysical Journal, 620(2), 861–877. https://doi.org/10.1086/427177
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