English

Explosive Nucleosynthesis from GRB and Hypernova Progenitors: Direct Collapse versus Fallback

Astrophysics 2008-11-26 v1

Abstract

The collapsar engine behind long-duration gamma-ray bursts extracts the energy released from the rapid accretion of a collapsing star onto a stellar-massed black hole. In a collapsing star, this black hole can form in two ways: the direct collapse of the stellar core into a black hole and the delayed collapse of a black hole caused by fallback in a weak supernova explosion. In the case of a delayed-collapse black hole, the strong collapsar-driven explosion overtakes the weak supernova explosion before shock breakout, and it is very difficult to distinguish this black hole formation scenario from the direct collapse scenario. However, the delayed-collapse mechanism, with its double explosion, produces explosive nucleosynthetic yields that are very different from the direct collapse scenario. We present 1-dimensional studies of the nucleosynthetic yields from both black hole formation scenarios, deriving differences and trends in their nucleosynthetic yields.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.astro-ph/0604471,
  title  = {Explosive Nucleosynthesis from GRB and Hypernova Progenitors: Direct Collapse versus Fallback},
  author = {Christopher L. Fryer and Patrick A. Young and Aimee L. Hungerford},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:astro-ph/0604471},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

47 pages, submitted to ApJ