Nuclear
Physics Colloquium
Location: Institute of
Theoretical Physics, Max-von-Laue-Str. 1, Serminar Room PHYS 2.116
Time: Thursday, January
30, 2014, 4:30-5:30pm (plus
10min for discussion)
Contact: hees@fias.uni-frankfurt.de
Unravelling the Explosion Mechanism of Massive Stars
- Supernova Models Confronting Observations
Hans-Thomas Janka (Max-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik, Garching)
When a massive star reaches the end of its life, the core of the star
collapses to a neutron star or black hole while
the outer stellar layers are expelled in a supernova explosion.
These cosmic catastrophies are not only among the most spectacular
celestial phenomena, they are also responsible for the production
and dissemination of a major part of the heavy elements in the
universe. A better understanding of the role of supernovae in
astrophysics and as laboratories for nuclear and particle
physics at extreme conditions requires the solution of one
of the most long-standing problems of stellar physics: What is
the mechanism that initiates and powers the explosion of stars?
Increasingly sophisticated numerical models provide growing
support that the energy deposition by neutrinos radiated from the
hot, newly formed neutron star and aided by violent hydrodynamic
mass motions is the driving agency of the explosion. In this
talk I will review recent successes of theoretical modeling and new
questions arising as simulations currently push forward to
meet the grand computational challenges of the third spatial
dimension. I will also discuss possibilities to confront the
theoretical picture with observational tests and constraints.