Linking the rates of neutron star binaries and short gamma-ray bursts
Nikhil Sarin, Paul D. Lasky, Francisco H. Vivanco, Simon P. Stevenson,, Debatri Chattopadhyay, Rory Smith, Eric Thrane

TL;DR
This paper estimates the rates of neutron star mergers producing short gamma-ray bursts, constrains jet opening angles, and forecasts how future gravitational-wave observations can refine our understanding of these phenomena.
Contribution
It provides updated merger rate estimates, constrains jet opening angles, and predicts how future detections will improve understanding of short gamma-ray burst origins.
Findings
BNS merger rate: 384^{+431}_{-213} Gpc^{-3} yr^{-1}
Jet opening angle in BNS mergers: approximately 15 degrees
Fraction of mergers producing observable short gamma-ray bursts: ~2% for BNS, ~1% for NSBH
Abstract
Short gamma-ray bursts are believed to be produced by both binary neutron star (BNS) and neutron star-black hole (NSBH) mergers. We use current estimates for the BNS and NSBH merger rates to calculate the fraction of observable short gamma-ray bursts produced through each channel. This allows us to constrain merger rates of BNS to ( credible interval), a decrease in the rate uncertainties from the second LIGO--Virgo Gravitational-Wave Transient Catalog, GWTC-2. Assuming a top-hat emission profile with a large Lorentz factor, we constrain the average opening angle of gamma-ray burst jets produced in BNS mergers to . We also measure the fraction of BNS and NSBH mergers that produce an observable short gamma-ray burst to be and , respectively and find…
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