Rayleigh-Taylor Instabilities in Supernovae Explosions: Partial Density of Oxygen

  • Released Saturday, February 12, 1994
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The following calculation shows the development and evolution of Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities which develop behind the supernova blast wave on a time scale of a few hours. The initial model was chosen to provide a good representation for the progenitor star for Supernova 1987A. The calculation was performed using the Piecewise-Parabolic Method for hydrodynamics on a two-dimensional spherical grid with rotational symmetry about the vertical axis and equatorial symmetry about the horizontal axis.

The grid contained 800 zones in the radial direction and 400 zones in the angular diraction and was allowed to expand homologously with the explosion to maintain as high a resolution as possible in the unstable layer during the evolution. The following sequences show the evolution of the density distribution as well as the distribution of hydrogen, helium, and oxygen within the ejecta to illustrate the amount of mixing caused by the instability. Each sequence shows the evolution in two reference frames.

In the first frame, the size of the plot expands with time as the grid expands. For the second reference frame, the size of the plot is kept fixed with the time so that more detail can be seen in the unstable layer.

Video slate image reads "Partial Density of Oxygen".

Video slate image reads "Partial Density of Oxygen".



Credits

Please give credit for this item to:
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio

Release date

This page was originally published on Saturday, February 12, 1994.
This page was last updated on Wednesday, May 3, 2023 at 2:00 PM EDT.


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This visualization can be found in the following series:

Papers used in this visualization

Fryxell, B. A., Muller, E., and Arnett, D., 1989, Hydrodynamics and Nuclear Burning (MPI Astrophys. Rep. 449; Garching: MPI Astrophys)