4.7 Article

LONG GAMMA-RAY TRANSIENTS FROM COLLAPSARS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 752, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/752/1/32

Keywords

dark ages, reionization, first stars; gamma rays: stars; stars: massive; supernovae: general

Funding

  1. UCSC by the National Science Foundation [AST 0909129]
  2. NASA [NNX09AK36G]
  3. DOE Program for Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) [DE-FC02-09ER41618]
  4. US Department of Energy [DE-FG02-87ER40328]
  5. NSF [AST-1109394]
  6. Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics (JINA
  7. NSF) [PHY02-16783]

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In the collapsar model for common gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), the formation of a centrifugally supported disk occurs during the first similar to 10 s following the collapse of the iron core in a massive star. This only occurs in a small fraction of massive stellar deaths, however, and requires unusual conditions. A much more frequent occurrence could be the death of a star that makes a black hole and a weak or absent outgoing shock, but in a progenitor that only has enough angular momentum in its outermost layers to make a disk. We consider several cases where this is likely to occur-blue supergiants with low mass-loss rates, tidally interacting binaries involving either helium stars or giant stars, and the collapse to a black hole of very massive pair-instability supernovae. These events have in common the accretion of a solar mass or so of material through a disk over a period much longer than the duration of a common GRB. A broad range of powers is possible, 10(47)-10(50) erg s(-1), and this brightness could be enhanced by beaming. Such events were probably more frequent in the early universe where mass-loss rates were lower. Indeed, this could be one of the most common forms of gamma-ray transients in the universe and could be used to study first generation stars. Several events could be active in the sky at any one time. Recent examples of this sort of event may have been the Swift transients Sw-1644+57, Sw-2058+0516, and GRB 101225A.

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