Short GRBs with Extended Emission from Magnetar Birth: Jet Formation and Collimation
N. Bucciantini, (NORDITA, AlbaNova Univ. Center), B.D. Metzger (Dep., Astrophysical Sciences, Princeton), T.A. Thompson (Dep. of Astronomy, Ohio, State Univ.), E. Quataert, (Astronomy Dep., UC Berkeley)

TL;DR
This paper models how magnetar winds interact with surrounding ejecta to produce jets that explain extended emission in short GRBs, predicting observable events without associated short GRBs.
Contribution
It introduces time-dependent MHD simulations of magnetar wind-ejecta interactions, revealing jet formation and collimation mechanisms relevant to short GRB extended emission.
Findings
Magnetar wind collides with ejecta to form a magnetized nebula.
A bipolar jet emerges, with properties depending on wind energy and ejecta mass.
Some events may produce observable extended emission without a short GRB.
Abstract
Approximately 1/4-1/2 of short duration Gamma-Ray Bursts are followed by variable X-ray emission lasting ~ 100 s with a fluence comparable or exceeding that of the initial burst itself. The long duration and significant energy of this `extended emission'(EE) poses a major challenge to the standard binary neutron star merger model. metzger08 recently proposed that the EE is powered by the spin-down of a strongly magnetized neutron star. However, the effects of surrounding material on the magnetar outflow have not yet been considered. Here we present time-dependent axisymmetric relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the interaction of the relativistic proto-magnetar wind with a surrounding 10^-1 10^-3 M_\odot envelope, which represents material ejected during the merger; the supernova following AIC; or via outflows from the accretion disk. The collision between the relativistic…
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.
