On the Prompt Signals of Gamma Ray Bursts
Pisin Chen, Toshi Tajima, Yoshi Takahashi

TL;DR
This paper proposes a comprehensive model explaining the prompt signals of gamma ray bursts through a sequence of relativistic plasma phases, phase transitions, and wave interactions that produce observed spectra.
Contribution
It introduces a novel physical mechanism involving quark-gluon plasma, QCD phase transition, and wave mode conversion to explain GRB prompt signals and spectra.
Findings
The model accounts for the quasi-thermal and high-energy tail spectra.
Predicted peak frequency matches observed redshifted values.
Provides a framework linking plasma physics to GRB observations.
Abstract
We introduce a new model of gamma ray burst (GRB) that explains its observed prompt signals, namely, its primary quasi-thermal spectrum and high energy tail. This mechanism can be applied to either assumption of GRB progenitor: coalescence of compact objects or hypernova explosion. The key ingredients of our model are: (1) The initial stage of a GRB is in the form of a relativistic quark-gluon plasma "lava"; (2) The expansion and cooling of this lava results in a QCD phase transition that induces a sudden gravitational stoppage of the condensed non-relativistic baryons and form a hadrosphere; (3) Acoustic shocks and Alfven waves (magnetoquakes) that erupt in episodes from the epicenter efficiently transport the thermal energy to the hadrospheric surface and induce a rapid detachment of leptons and photons from the hadrons; (4) The detached and form an opaque,…
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