Supernova Fallback onto Magnetars and Propeller-Powered Supernovae
Anthony L. Piro, Christian D. Ott

TL;DR
This paper investigates how fallback accretion onto magnetars influences supernova explosions, revealing mechanisms that can produce diverse supernova types and gravitational waves depending on magnetic field strength, spin, and accretion rates.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed model of fallback onto magnetars, highlighting the propeller regime's role in shaping supernova brightness, ejecta velocity, and gravitational wave emission, which was not previously characterized.
Findings
Magnetar properties determine black hole formation or gravitational wave emission.
Propeller mechanism energizes supernova ejecta, affecting luminosity and velocity.
Magnetar mass increases beyond typical neutron star masses due to fallback accretion.
Abstract
We explore fallback accretion onto newly born magnetars during the supernova of massive stars. Strong magnetic fields (~10^{15} G) and short spin periods (~1-10 ms) have an important influence on how the magnetar interacts with the infalling material. At long spin periods, weak magnetic fields, and high accretion rates, sufficient material is accreted to form a black hole, as is commonly found for massive progenitor stars. When B<5*10^{14} G, accretion causes the magnetar to spin sufficiently rapidly to deform triaxially and produce gravitational waves, but only for ~50-200 s until it collapses to a black hole. Conversely, at short spin periods, strong magnetic fields, and low accretion rates, the magnetar is in the "propeller regime" and avoids becoming a black hole by expelling incoming material. This process spins down the magnetar, so that gravitational waves are only expected if…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
