The Proto-Magnetar Model for Gamma-Ray Bursts
B.D. Metzger, D. Giannios, T.A. Thompson, N. Bucciantini, E. Quataert

TL;DR
This paper develops a self-consistent proto-magnetar model for long gamma-ray bursts, linking central engine properties to observed emissions, and compares magnetic dissipation and internal shock mechanisms, favoring the former.
Contribution
It extends previous models by connecting proto-magnetar wind evolution directly to GRB prompt emission, incorporating detailed jet collimation and magnetization effects.
Findings
Magnetar winds become ultra-relativistic and Poynting-flux dominated within seconds.
Magnetic dissipation predicts a stable spectral peak energy during the burst.
Prompt emission ends when the jet's magnetization becomes too high for effective energy dissipation.
Abstract
Long duration Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) originate from the core collapse of massive stars, but the identity of the central engine remains elusive. Previous work has shown that rapidly spinning, strongly magnetized proto-neutron stars (`millisecond proto-magnetars') produce outflows with energies, timescales, and magnetizations sigma_0 (maximum Lorentz factor) that are consistent with those required to produce long GRBs. Here we extend this work in order to construct a self-consistent model that directly connects the properties of the central engine to the observed prompt emission. Just after the launch of the supernova shock, a wind heated by neutrinos is driven from the proto-magnetar. The outflow is collimated into a bipolar jet by its interaction with the star. As the magnetar cools, the wind becomes ultra-relativistic and Poynting-flux dominated (sigma_0 >> 1) on a timescale…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
