GRB 090510: a genuine short-GRB from a binary neutron star coalescing into a Kerr-Newman black hole
R. Ruffini, M. Muccino, Y. Aimuratov, C.L. Bianco, C. Cherubini, M., Enderli, M. Kovacevic, R. Moradi, A.V. Penacchioni, G.B. Pisani, J.A. Rueda,, Y. Wang

TL;DR
This paper classifies short gamma-ray bursts into two sub-classes based on energy and formation outcomes, providing evidence that the most energetic ones originate from binary neutron star mergers forming Kerr or Kerr-Newman black holes, with detailed spectral analysis supporting this.
Contribution
It introduces a new classification of short GRBs, linking their energetics to the type of compact object formed, and presents the first evidence of a Kerr or Kerr-Newman black hole formation in a short GRB.
Findings
GRB 090510's energetics support black hole formation.
Spectral analysis indicates a dyadotorus origin for the P-GRB.
GeV emission correlates with black hole formation in short GRBs.
Abstract
In a new classification of merging binary neutron stars (NSs) we separate short gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) in two sub-classes. The ones with erg coalesce to form a massive NS and are indicated as short gamma-ray flashes (S-GRFs). The hardest, with erg, coalesce to form a black hole (BH) and are indicated as genuine short-GRBs (S-GRBs). Within the fireshell model, S-GRBs exhibit three different components: the P-GRB emission, observed at the transparency of a self-accelerating baryon- plasma; the prompt emission, originating from the interaction of the accelerated baryons with the circumburst medium; the high-energy (GeV) emission, observed after the P-GRB and indicating the formation of a BH. GRB 090510 gives the first evidence for the formation of a Kerr BH or, possibly, a Kerr-Newman BH. Its P-GRB spectrum can be fitted by a…
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