10–13 Aug 2011
AlbaNova University Center
Europe/Stockholm timezone

Theory of dust formation in core-collapse supernovae

11 Aug 2011, 16:00
30m
Oskar Klein (AlbaNova University Center)

Oskar Klein

AlbaNova University Center

Speaker

Dr Isabelle Cherchneff (Universitaet Basel)

Description

Cosmic dust forms in the circumstellar environments of evolved stars with low and high masses because the synthesis of dust requires high gas densities and temperatures. Supernovae are one of these environments and form dust in their ejecta a few months after their explosion. The harsh physical conditions met in the ejecta and the absence of hydrogen hamper the production of complex molecular species as precursors to dust grains. However, dust appears to effectively form in the ejecta implying that efficient pathways to the synthesis of silicates, metal sulphides and amorphous carbon from the gas phase are active. I will review former theories of dust formation in supernovae and present a new approach linking the gas phase to the solid phase in the ejecta. The various routes to dust relevant to supernova environments will be discussed as well as new results on dust clusters synthesis in supernovae with solar metallicity progenitors.

Primary author

Dr Isabelle Cherchneff (Universitaet Basel)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.