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We study differential rotation in late-stage shell convection in a 3D hydrodynamic simulation of a rapidly rotating $16M_odot$ helium star with a particular focus on the convective oxygen shell. We find that the oxygen shell develops a quasi-stationary pattern of differential rotation that is neither described by uniform angular velocity as assumed in current stellar evolution models of supernova progenitors, nor by uniform specific angular momentum. Instead, the oxygen shell develops a positive angular velocity gradient with faster rotation at the equator than at the pole by tens of percent. We show that the angular momentum transport inside the convection zone is not adequately captured by a diffusive mixing-length flux proportional to the angular velocity or angular momentum gradient. Zonal flow averages reveal stable large-scale meridional flow and an entropy deficit near the equator that mirrors the patterns in the angular velocity. The structure of the flow is reminiscent of simulations of stellar surface convection zones and the differential rotation of the Sun, suggesting that similar effects are involved; future simulations will need to address in more detail how the interplay of buoyancy, inertial forces, and turbulent stresses shapes differential rotation during late-stage convection in massive stars. Our findings may have implications for neutron star birth spin periods and supernova explosion scenarios that involve rapid core rotation. If convective regions develop positive angular velocity gradients, angular momentum could be shuffled out of the core region more efficiently, potentially making the formation of millisecond magnetars more difficult.
It has been suggested based on analytic theory that even in non-rotating supernova progenitors stochastic spin-up by internal gravity waves (IGWs) during the late burning stages can impart enough angular momentum to the core to result in neutron star
We perform for the first time a 3D hydrodynamics simulation of the evolution of the last minutes pre-collapse of the oxygen shell of a fast-rotating massive star. This star has an initial mass of 38 M$_odot$, a metallicity of $sim$1/50 Z$_odot$, an i
We perform two- (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) hydrodynamics simulations of convective oxygen shell-burning that takes place deep inside a massive progenitor star of a core-collapse supernova. Using one dimensional (1D) stellar evolution code, we fi
The carbon-oxygen white dwarf (CO WD) + He star channel is one of the promising ways for producing type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) with short delay times. Recent studies found that carbon under the He-shell can be ignited if the mass-accretion rate of CO
The detection of mixed modes that are split by rotation in Kepler red giants has made it possible to probe the internal rotation profiles of these stars, which brings new constraints on the transport of angular momentum in stars. Mosser et al. (2012)