Probing the progenitors of spinning binary black-hole mergers with long gamma-ray bursts
Simone S. Bavera, Tassos Fragos, Emmanouil Zapartas, Enrico, Ramirez-Ruiz, Pablo Marchant, Luke Z. Kelley, Michael Zevin, Jeff J. Andrews,, Scott Coughlin, Aaron Dotter, Konstantinos Kovlakas, Devina Misra, Juan G., Serra-Perez, Ying Qin, Kyle A. Rocha, Jaime Rom\'an-Garza

TL;DR
This study links long gamma-ray bursts to the progenitors of spinning binary black-hole mergers through binary stellar evolution models, suggesting a significant fraction of observed gamma-ray bursts originate from such progenitors, providing insights beyond current gravitational wave detection limits.
Contribution
The paper introduces a binary evolution model that explains the connection between long gamma-ray bursts and spinning binary black-hole mergers, supported by population synthesis calculations and observational data.
Findings
Approximately 10% of GWTC-2 binary black holes may have associated long gamma-ray bursts.
Model predicts a rate density of gamma-ray bursts consistent with observations for certain beaming fractions.
Between 20% to 85% of observed long gamma-ray bursts could originate from progenitors of merging binary black holes.
Abstract
Long-duration gamma-ray bursts are thought to be associated with the core-collapse of massive, rapidly spinning stars and the formation of black holes. However, efficient angular momentum transport in stellar interiors, currently supported by asteroseismic and gravitational-wave constraints, leads to predominantly slowly-spinning stellar cores. Here, we report on binary stellar evolution and population synthesis calculations, showing that tidal interactions in close binaries not only can explain the observed sub-population of spinning, merging binary black holes but also lead to long gamma-ray bursts at the time of black-hole formation. Given our model calibration against the distribution of isotropic-equivalent energies of luminous long gamma-ray bursts, we find that ~10% of the GWTC-2 reported binary black holes had a luminous long gamma-ray burst associated with their formation, with…
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