On the rate and on the gravitational wave emission of short and long GRBs
R. Ruffini, J. Rodriguez, M. Muccino, J. A. Rueda, Y. Aimuratov, U., Barres de Almeida, L. Becerra, C. L. Bianco, C. Cherubini, S. Filippi, D., Gizzi, M. Kovacevic, R. Moradi, F. G. Oliveira, G. B. Pisani, Y. Wang

TL;DR
This paper classifies gamma-ray bursts into seven subclasses based on their binary progenitors and explores their gravitational wave emission, assessing their detectability with current and future GW detectors.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed subclassification of GRBs linked to specific binary progenitors and analyzes their gravitational wave emission and detection prospects.
Findings
Long GRBs are associated with CO-core-NS/BH binaries.
Short GRBs originate from NS-NS and NS-BH binaries.
Detection prospects vary among subclasses with current GW observatories.
Abstract
On the ground of the large number of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) detected with cosmological redshift, we classified GRBs in seven subclasses, all with binary progenitors originating gravitational waves (GWs). Each binary is composed by combinations of carbon-oxygen cores (CO), neutron stars (NSs), black holes (BHs) and white dwarfs (WDs). The long bursts, traditionally assumed to originate from a BH with an ultra-relativistic jetted emission, not emitting GWs, have been subclassified as (I) X-ray flashes (XRFs), (II) binary-driven hypernovae (BdHNe), and (III) BH-supernovae (BH-SNe). They are framed within the induced gravitational collapse (IGC) paradigm with progenitor a CO-NS/BH binary. The supernova (SN) explosion of the CO triggers an accretion process onto the NS/BH. If the accretion does not lead the NS to its critical mass, an XRF occurs, while…
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