The Millisecond Magnetar Central Engine in short GRBs
Hou-Jun L\"u, Bing Zhang, Wei-Hua Lei, Ye Li, Paul D Lasky

TL;DR
This study systematically analyzes short GRB light curves to test the millisecond magnetar central engine model, finding evidence supporting magnetar formation and constraining neutron star equations of state.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive classification of short GRBs based on plateau features and links the data to neutron star EOS constraints, a novel approach in GRB research.
Findings
Extended emission and internal X-ray plateaus are fundamentally the same component.
The magnetar surface magnetic field and initial spin period are within expected ranges.
Data favor a neutron star equation of state close to the GM1 model.
Abstract
One favored progenitor model for short duration gamma-ray bursts (SGRBs) is the coalescence of two neutron stars (NS-NS). One possible outcome of such a merger would be a rapidly spinning, strongly magnetized neutron star (known as a millisecond magnetar). These magnetars may be "supra-massive", implying they would collapse to black holes after losing centrifugal support due to magnetic dipole spindown. By systematically analyzing the BAT-XRT light curves of all short GRBs detected by {\em swift}, we test how well the data are consistent with this central engine model of short GRBs. We find that the so-called "extended emission" observed with BAT in some short GRBs are fundamentally the same component as the "internal X-ray plateau" as observed in many short GRBs, which is defined as a plateau in the lightcurve followed by a very rapid drop. Based on how likely a short GRB hosts a…
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