Radio Constraints on Long-Lived Magnetar Remnants in Short Gamma-Ray Bursts
Wen-fai Fong (Einstein Fellow, University of Arizona), Brian D., Metzger (Columbia), Edo Berger (Harvard), Feryal Ozel (University of Arizona)

TL;DR
This study uses deep radio observations to constrain the existence and properties of long-lived magnetar remnants in short gamma-ray bursts, ruling out certain energy levels for some events.
Contribution
It provides the most extensive and sensitive radio search to date for long-term emission from magnetar remnants in short GRBs, setting new limits on their energy and longevity.
Findings
Ruled out stable magnetars with 10^53 erg energy for half of the sample.
Ruled out a supramassive remnant with 10^52 erg energy for one event.
Placed the deepest limits on long-term radio emission from short GRBs to date.
Abstract
The merger of a neutron star binary may result in the formation of a rapidly-spinning magnetar. The magnetar can potentially survive for seconds or longer as a supramassive neutron star before collapsing to a black hole if, indeed, it collapses at all. During this process, a fraction of the magnetar's rotational energy of ~10^53 erg is transferred via magnetic spin-down to the surrounding ejecta. The resulting interaction between the ejecta and the surrounding circumburst medium powers a >year-long synchrotron radio transient. We present a search for radio emission with the Very Large Array following nine short-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) at rest-frame times of ~1.3-7.6 years after the bursts, focusing on those events which exhibit early-time excess X-ray emission that may signify the presence of magnetars. We place upper limits of <18-32 microJy on the 6.0 GHz radio emission,…
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