Collapsar Accretion and the Gamma-Ray Burst X-Ray Light Curve
Christopher C. Lindner, Milos Milosavljevic, Sean M. Couch, Pawan, Kumar

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to connect the accretion processes in collapsars with observed gamma-ray burst X-ray light curves, revealing how accretion dynamics shape the light curve phases.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation-based model linking collapsar accretion behavior to gamma-ray burst light curve features, including shock formation and accretion rate decline.
Findings
Accretion shock formation causes a steep decline in accretion rate.
The plateau phase corresponds to a steady-state accretion regime.
Neutrino cooling influences the duration of the prompt emission.
Abstract
We present axisymmetric hydrodynamical simulations of the long-term accretion of a rotating GRB progenitor star, a "collapsar," onto the central compact object. The simulations were carried out with the adaptive mesh refinement code FLASH in two spatial dimensions and with an explicit shear viscosity. The evolution of the central accretion rate exhibits phases reminiscent of the long GRB gamma-ray and X-ray light curve, which lends support to the proposal that the luminosity is modulated by the central accretion rate. After a few tens of seconds, an accretion shock sweeps outward through the star. The formation and outward expansion of the accretion shock is accompanied with a sudden and rapid power-law decline in the central accretion rate Mdot ~ t^{-2.8}, which resembles the L_X ~ t^{-3} decline observed in the X-ray light curves. The collapsed, shock-heated stellar envelope settles…
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