Research project Black Holes from Core Collapse Supernovae
Black holes are formed deep within dying massive stars and they signal a special evolution away from the canonical picture where the star explodes and leaves behind a neutron star. To probe these special evolutions and the formation pathways of black holes is a crucial link between our understanding of stellar evolution and gravitational wave astrophysics.

Numerical simulation of a supernova. Credit: E. O'Connor/K.-C. Pan (YT Project)
The burgeoning field of Gravitational Wave Astrophysics is now revealing a population of black holes that until recently have been invisible to us.
Our group performs numerical simulations of the so-called central engine of core-collapse supernovae using high performance computing resources across Sweden. We focus on scenarios where the central engine results in black hole formation, but also use the state-of-the-art code developed by the team and collaborators to study all aspects of the core-collapse supernova central engine.
Project managers
Evan Patrick O'ConnorNo news items available.
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