4.7 Article

Precessing magnetars as central engines in short gamma-ray bursts

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 502, Issue 2, Pages 2482-2494

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stab153

Keywords

gamma-ray bursts: general; stars: magnetars; stars: magnetic field; stars: oscillations

Funding

  1. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  2. DFG [413873357]

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This study found that 16 out of 25 magnetars associated with X-ray light curves exhibiting a plateau show evidence of precession. The analysis of the light curves allows for an independent measure of the extent of star deformation and distribution of magnetic-energy ratios.
Short gamma-ray bursts that are followed by long-duration X-ray plateaus may be powered by the birth, and hydrodynamic evolution, of magnetars from compact binary coalescence events. If the rotation and magnetic axes of the system are not orthogonal to each other, the star will undergo free precession, leading to fluctuations in the luminosity of the source. In some cases, precession-induced modulations in the spin-down power may be discernible in the X-ray flux of the plateau. In this work, 25 X-ray light curves associated with bursts exhibiting a plateau are fitted to luminosity profiles appropriate for precessing, oblique rotators. Based on the Akaike Information Criterion, 16 of the magnetars within the sample display either moderate or strong evidence for precession. Additionally, since the precession period of the star is directly tied to its quadrupolar ellipticity, the fits allow for an independent measure of the extent to which the star is deformed by internal stresses. Assuming these deformations arise due to a mixed poloidal-toroidal magnetic field, we find that the distribution of magnetic-energy ratios is bimodal, with data points clustering around energetically equal and toroidally dominated partitions. Implications of this result for gravitational-wave emission and dynamo activity in newborn magnetars are discussed.

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