GRB beaming and gravitational-wave observations
Hsin-Yu Chen, Daniel E. Holz

TL;DR
This paper predicts gravitational-wave detection rates of neutron star mergers associated with short gamma-ray bursts, constrains progenitor properties from non-detections, and discusses implications for future observations.
Contribution
It provides estimates for GW detection timelines based on GRB rates, constrains progenitor models from existing data, and analyzes the likelihood of coincident GW-GRB detections.
Findings
First NS-NS merger detection likely within 16 months at advanced LIGO sensitivity.
Non-detection constrains progenitor masses and beaming angles.
GRB-triggered GW sources are less frequent than untriggered ones for small beaming angles.
Abstract
Using the observed rate of short-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) it is possible to make predictions for the detectable rate of compact binary coalescences in gravitational-wave detectors. These estimates rely crucially on the growing consensus that short gamma-ray bursts are associated with the merger of two neutron stars or a neutron star and a black hole, but otherwise make no assumptions beyond the observed rate of short GRBs. In particular, our results do not assume coincident gravitational wave and electromagnetic observations. We show that the non-detection of mergers in the existing LIGO/Virgo data constrains the progenitor masses and beaming angles of gamma-ray bursts. For future detectors, we find that the first detection of a NS-NS binary coalescence associated with the progenitors of short GRBs is likely to happen within the first 16 months of observation, even in the case…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
