4.7 Article

Resonant shattering flares in black hole-neutron star and binary neutron star mergers

期刊

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stac1645

关键词

dense matter; gravitational waves; stars: neutron; black hole; neutron star mergers; neutron star mergers; gamma-ray bursts

资金

  1. University of Bath
  2. European Union Horizon 2020 programme under the AHEAD2020 project [871158]
  3. Government of Canada through the Department of Innovation, Science and Economic Development
  4. Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Colleges and Universities
  5. NASA [80NSSC18K1019]

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Resonant shattering flares (RSFs) are bursts of gamma-rays triggered by tidal resonance of a neutron star (NS) during binary inspiral. By modeling multiple colliding relativistic shells, it is found that the non-thermal gamma-ray emission from these flares could be very bright and a broad-band afterglow may be produced.
Resonant shattering flares (RSFs) are bursts of gamma-rays expected to be triggered by tidal resonance of a neutron star (NS) during binary inspiral. They are strongly dependent on the magnetic field strength at the surface of the NS. By modelling these flares as being the result of multiple colliding relativistic shells launched during the resonance window, we find that the prompt non-thermal gamma-ray emission may have luminosity up to a few x10(48) erg s(-1), and that a broad-band afterglow could be produced. We compute the expected rates of detectable RSFs using the BPASS population synthesis code, with different assumptions about the evolution of surface magnetic field strengths before merger. We find the rate of detectable RSFs to be similar to 0.0001-5 per year for BHNS mergers and similar to 0.0005-25 per year for NSNS mergers, with the lower bound corresponding to surface-field decay consistent with magneto-thermal evolution in purely crustal fields, while the upper bounds are for systems that have longer lived surface magnetic fields supported by flux frozen into the superconducting core. If some of the observed SGRB precursor flares are indeed RSFs, this suggests the presence of a longer lived surface field for some fraction of the NS population, and that we could expect RSFs to be the most common detectable EM counterpart to GW detections of BHNS mergers. The non-detection of an RSF prior to GRB170817A provides an upper bound on the magnetic fields of the progenitor NSs of B-surf similar to 10(13.5)G.

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