Publication Date:
2014-10-26
Description:
We study the amplification of magnetic fields in the collapse and the post-bounce evolution of the core of a non-rotating star of 15 M in axisymmetry. To this end, we solve the coupled equations of magnetohydrodynamics and neutrino transport in the two-moment approximation. The pre-collapse magnetic field is strongly amplified by compression in the infall. Initial fields of the order of 10 10 G translate into protoneutron star fields similar to the ones observed in pulsars, while stronger initial fields yield magnetar-like final field strengths. After core bounce, the field is advected through the hydrodynamically unstable neutrino-heating layer, where non-radial flows due to convection and the standing accretion shock instability amplify the field further. Consequently, the resulting amplification factor of the order of 5 is the result of the number of small-eddy turnovers taking place within the time-scale of advection through the post-shock layer. Due to this limit, most of our models do not reach equipartition between kinetic and magnetic energy and, consequently, evolve similarly to the non-magnetic case, exploding after about 800 ms when a single or few high-entropy bubbles persist over several dynamical time-scales. In the model with the strongest initial field we studied, 10 12 G, for which equipartition between flow and field is achieved, the magnetic tension favours a much earlier development of such long-lived high-entropy bubbles and enforces a fairly ordered large-scale flow pattern. Consequently, this model, after exhibiting very regular shock oscillations, explodes much earlier than non-magnetic ones.
Print ISSN:
0035-8711
Electronic ISSN:
1365-2966
Topics:
Physics
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