Magnetic Fields and Afterglows of BdHNe: Inferences from GRB 130427A, GRB 160509A, GRB 160625B, GRB 180728A and GRB 190114C
Jorge A. Rueda, R. Ruffini, M. Karlica, R. Moradi, Y. Wang

TL;DR
This paper investigates the magnetic fields and afterglows of binary-driven hypernovae (BdHNe) by analyzing multiple gamma-ray bursts, revealing consistent afterglow structures powered by the newborn neutron star's synchrotron emission and detailing magnetic field properties.
Contribution
It extends the BdHN theory to multiple GRBs, characterizing afterglow structures and magnetic fields, and distinguishes between BdHN I and II subclasses based on accretion and collapse outcomes.
Findings
Afterglow structures are consistent across studied BdHNe.
Synchrotron emission from the newborn neutron star explains afterglow features.
Magnetic field properties and spin are determined for different BdHN subclasses.
Abstract
GRB 190114C is the first binary-driven hypernova (BdHN) fully observed from the initial supernova appearance to the final emergence of the optical SN signal. It offers an unprecedented testing ground for the BdHN theory and it is here determined and further extended to additional gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). BdHNe comprise two subclasses of long GRBs with progenitors a binary system composed of a carbon-oxygen star (CO) and a neutron star (NS) companion. The CO explodes as a SN leaving at its center a newborn NS (NS). The SN ejecta hypercritically accretes both on the NS and the NS companion. BdHNe I are the tightest binaries where the accretion leads the companion NS to gravitational collapse into a black hole (BH). In BdHN II the accretion onto the NS is lower, so there is no BH formation. We observe the same structure of the afterglow for GRB…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
