Quark-Novae in Low-Mass X-ray Binaries with massive neutron stars: A universal model for short-hard Gamma-Ray Bursts
Rachid Ouyed (1), Jan E. Staff (2), Prashanth Jaikumar (3, 4) ((1), Physics&Astronomy, University of Calgary, AB, Canada, (2) Physics&Astronomy,, Louisiana State University, LA, USA, (3) Physics&Astronomy, California State, University Long Beach, CA, USA

TL;DR
This paper proposes a universal model for short-hard Gamma-ray Bursts based on Quark-Novae occurring in low-mass X-ray binaries with massive neutron stars, explaining their prompt emission, spectra, and afterglow features.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model linking Quark-Novae in specific binary systems to the observed properties of short-hard GRBs, including spectral features and extended emission.
Findings
Model fits well with observed GRB spectra and fluence data.
Explains extended emission through shock-heating and ablation processes.
Predicts spectral signatures similar to Type Ib/c supernovae.
Abstract
We show that several features reminiscent of short-hard Gamma-ray Bursts (GRBs) arise naturally when Quark-Novae occur in low-mass X-ray binaries born with massive neutron stars (> 1.6M_sun) and harboring a circumbinary disk. Near the end of the first accretion phase, conditions are just right for the explosive conversion of the neutron star to a quark star (Quark-Nova). In our model, the subsequent interaction of material from the neutron star's ejected crust with the circumbinary disk explains the duration, variability and near-universal nature of the prompt emission in short-hard GRBs. We also describe a statistical approach to ejecta break-up and collision to obtain the photon spectrum in our model, which turns out remarkably similar to the empirical Band function (Band 1993). We apply the model to the fluence and spectrum of GRB 000727, GRB 000218, and GRB980706A obtaining…
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