Gravitational wave background from sub-luminous GRBs: prospects for second and third generation detectors
E. Howell, T. Regimbau, A. Corsi, D. Coward, R. Burman

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the potential for detecting gravitational wave backgrounds from sub-luminous gamma-ray bursts using advanced detectors, highlighting the most promising scenarios and the influence of cosmic metallicity evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed assessment of GW background detection prospects from SL-GRBs, considering different emission mechanisms and cosmic evolution effects.
Findings
Secular bar-mode instability offers the best detection prospects.
Detection possible with Einstein Telescopes if certain rate thresholds are met.
Metallicity evolution increases predicted signal-to-noise ratios.
Abstract
We assess the detection prospects of a gravitational wave background associated with sub-luminous gamma-ray bursts (SL-GRBs). We assume that the central engines of a significant proportion of these bursts are provided by newly born magnetars and consider two plausible GW emission mechanisms. Firstly, the deformation-induced triaxial GW emission from a newly born magnetar. Secondly, the onset of a secular bar-mode instability, associated with the long lived plateau observed in the X-ray afterglows of many gamma-ray bursts (Corsi & Meszaros 2009a). With regards to detectability, we find that the onset of a secular instability is the most optimistic scenario: under the hypothesis that SL-GRBs associated with secularly unstable magnetars occur at a rate of (48; 80)Gpc^{-3}yr^{-1} or greater, cross-correlation of data from two Einstein Telescopes (ETs) could detect the GW background…
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