A cocoon shock breakout as the origin of the $ \gamma $-ray emission in GW170817
Ore Gottlieb, Ehud Nakar, Tsvi Piran, Kenta Hotokezaka

TL;DR
This paper proposes that the gamma-ray emission in GW170817 originated from a cocoon shock breakout following a neutron star merger, supported by analytic and numerical simulations, explaining the unique gamma-ray and electromagnetic observations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel shock breakout model for gamma-ray emission in neutron star mergers, supported by detailed relativistic hydrodynamic and radiation simulations.
Findings
Gamma-rays emerged from a mildly relativistic shock breakout of a cocoon.
The model explains the unique gamma-ray spectrum and light curve of GW170817.
The cocoon model aligns with observed macronova and radio emissions.
Abstract
The short Gamma-Ray Burst, GRB170817A, that followed the binary neutron star merger gravitational waves signal, GW170817, is not a usual sGRB. It is weaker by three orders of magnitude than the weakest sGRB seen before and its spectra, showing a hard early signal followed by a softer thermal spectrum, is unique. We show, first, that the -rays must have emerged from at least mildly relativistic outflow, implying that a relativistic jet was launched following the merger. We then show that the observations are consistent with the predictions of a mildly relativistic shock breakout: a minute -ray energy as compared with the total energy and a rather smooth light curve with a hard to soft evolution. We present here a novel analytic study and detailed numerical 2D and 3D relativistic hydrodynamic and radiation simulations that support the picture in which the observed…
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