What can we learn from gravitational waves from nearby core-collapse supernovae?

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Abstract

Core-collapse supernova is one of the expected sources of gravitational wave (GW). The GW detection can be a smoking gun to probe the still unknown explosion mechanism. In the coming era of "multi-messenger astronomy", we can use photons, neutrinos and GW simultaneously to investigate these objects. By performing multi-dimensional simulations of neutrino-radiation hydrodynamics systematically, we calculate the gravitational wave and neutrino signals from nearby (galactic) core-collapse supernova. Based on these signals we will discuss the extractable information about the very central part of core-collapse supernovae.

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Suwa, Y., Yokozawa, T., Asano, M., Kayano, T., Kanda, N., Koshio, Y., & Vagins, M. R. (2015). What can we learn from gravitational waves from nearby core-collapse supernovae? In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 600). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/600/1/012009

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