Fall-Back Disks in Long and Short GRBs
J.K. Cannizzo, E. Troja, and N. Gehrels

TL;DR
This paper models fall-back disks around black holes in GRBs, explaining X-ray plateau features and their inverse luminosity-duration relation through numerical simulations of disk evolution and angular momentum transport.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed numerical model of fall-back disks in GRBs, linking disk evolution to observed X-ray plateau properties and their correlations.
Findings
Disk evolution can produce X-ray plateaus lasting up to 10^4 seconds.
The inverse relation between luminosity and duration may be due to observational bias.
A standard fall-back mass reservoir can reproduce observed correlations.
Abstract
We present numerical time-dependent calculations for fall-back disks relevant to GRBs in which the disk of material surrounding the black hole (BH) powering the GRB jet modulates the mass flow, and hence the strength of the jet. Given the initial existence of a small mass <10^{-4} msun near the progenitor with a circularization radius ~10^{10}-10^{11} cm, an unavoidable consequence will be the formation of an "external disk" whose outer edge continually moves to larger radii due to angular momentum transport and lack of a confining torque. For long GRBs, if the mass distribution in the initial fall-back disk traces the progenitor envelope, then a radius ~10^{11} cm gives a time scale ~10^4 s for the X-ray plateau. For late times t>10^7 s a steepening due to a cooling front in the disk may have observational support in GRB 060729. For short GRBs, one expects most of the mass initially to…
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