High-Energy Neutrinos from Millisecond Magnetars formed from the Merger of Binary Neutron Stars
Ke Fang, Brian D. Metzger

TL;DR
This paper proposes that long-lived millisecond magnetars formed from neutron star mergers can produce detectable high-energy neutrinos, offering a new way to identify such remnants and understand cosmic ray origins.
Contribution
It introduces a model for neutrino production from magnetar remnants of neutron star mergers, predicting observable signals and their implications for astrophysics.
Findings
Neutrino emission peaks around a few days post-merger at ~10^18 eV.
Detectable neutrino signals could be observed out to 10-100 Mpc with current and future telescopes.
The cumulative neutrino background from such events may be within IceCube's sensitivity.
Abstract
The merger of a neutron star (NS) binary may result in the formation of a long-lived, or indefinitely stable, millisecond magnetar remnant surrounded by a low-mass ejecta shell. A portion of the magnetar's prodigious rotational energy is deposited behind the ejecta in a pulsar wind nebula, powering luminous optical/X-ray emission for hours to days following the merger. Ions in the pulsar wind may also be accelerated to ultra-high energies, providing a coincident source of high energy cosmic rays and neutrinos. At early times, the cosmic rays experience strong synchrotron losses; however, after a day or so, pion production through photomeson interaction with thermal photons in the nebula comes to dominate, leading to efficient production of high-energy neutrinos. After roughly a week, the density of background photons decreases sufficiently for cosmic rays to escape the source without…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
