Jet Dynamics in Compact Object Mergers: GW170817 Likely had a Successful Jet
Paul C. Duffell, Eliot Quataert, Daniel Kasen, and Hannah Klion

TL;DR
This study uses relativistic hydrodynamic simulations to analyze jet interactions with ejecta in neutron star mergers, revealing conditions for successful jet breakout and implications for observed gamma-ray delays and kilonova energetics.
Contribution
It provides new insights into jet breakout conditions, the timing of gamma-ray emission, and the thermal energy contribution to kilonovae in neutron star mergers.
Findings
Successful jet breakout requires the jet to escape the ejecta.
Late jet breakout explains the gamma-ray delay in GW 170817.
Shock heating is energetically subdominant in kilonova luminosity.
Abstract
We use relativistic hydrodynamic numerical calculations to study the interaction between a jet and a homologous outflow produced dynamically during binary neutron star mergers. We quantify how the thermal energy supplied by the jet to the ejecta and the ability of a jet to escape the homologous ejecta depend on the parameters of the jet engine and the ejecta. For collimated jets initiated at early times compared to the engine duration, we show that successful breakout of the forward cocoon shock necessitates a jet that successfully escapes the ejecta. This is because the ejecta is expanding and absorbing thermal energy, so that the forward shock from a failed jet stalls before it reaches the edge of the ejecta. This conclusion can be circumvented only for very energetic wide angle jets, with parameters that are uncomfortable given short-duration GRB observations. For successful jets, we…
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