4.7 Article

TRIGGERING COLLAPSE OF THE PRESOLAR DENSE CLOUD CORE AND INJECTING SHORT-LIVED RADIOISOTOPES WITH A SHOCK WAVE. III. ROTATING THREE-DIMENSIONAL CLOUD CORES

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 788, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/788/1/20

Keywords

hydrodynamics; instabilities; ISM : clouds; ISM : supernova remnants; planets and satellites : formation; protoplanetary disks; stars : formation

Funding

  1. NASAOrigins of Solar Systems [NNX09AF62G]
  2. NASA Astrobiology Institute [NNA09DA81A]
  3. ASC/Alliances Center for Astrophysical Thermonuclear Flashes at the University of Chicago
  4. NASA [NNX09AF62G, 118351] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
  5. Directorate For Geosciences
  6. Division Of Earth Sciences [0963396] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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A key test of the supernova triggering and injection hypothesis for the origin of the solar system's short-lived radioisotopes is to reproduce the inferred initial abundances of these isotopes. We present here the most detailed models to date of the shock wave triggering and injection process, where shock waves with varied properties strike fully three-dimensional, rotating, dense cloud cores. The models are calculated with the FLASH adaptive mesh hydrodynamics code. Three different outcomes can result: triggered collapse leading to fragmentation into a multiple protostar system; triggered collapse leading to a single protostar embedded in a protostellar disk; or failure to undergo dynamic collapse. Shock wave material is injected into the collapsing clouds through Rayleigh-Taylor fingers, resulting in initially inhomogeneous distributions in the protostars and protostellar disks. Cloud rotation about an axis aligned with the shock propagation direction does not increase the injection efficiency appreciably, as the shock parameters were chosen to be optimal for injection even in the absence of rotation. For a shock wave from a core-collapse supernova, the dilution factors for supernova material are in the range of similar to 10(-4) to similar to 3 x 10(-4), in agreement with recent laboratory estimates of the required amount of dilution for Fe-60 and Al-26. We conclude that a type II supernova remains as a promising candidate for synthesizing the solar system's short-lived radioisotopes shortly before their injection into the presolar cloud core by the supernova's remnant shock wave.

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