The Early Evolution of Magnetar Rotation I: Slowly Rotating "Normal" Magnetars
Tejas Prasanna, Matthew S. B. Coleman, Matthias J. Raives, Todd A., Thompson

TL;DR
This study uses 2D MHD simulations to show that normal, slowly rotating proto-magnetars spin down rapidly within seconds after formation, significantly affecting their magnetic and rotational evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based analysis of early magnetar spin-down for typical initial periods, highlighting the efficiency of spindown mechanisms beyond the dipole approximation.
Findings
Proto-magnetars with initial periods of 50-500 ms spin down rapidly within seconds.
Spindown efficiency is much higher than dipole formula predictions due to non-relativistic flows and plasmoid ejections.
Magnetic field strength and initial period critically influence early spin evolution.
Abstract
In the seconds following their formation in core-collapse supernovae, "proto"-magnetars drive neutrino-heated magneto-centrifugal winds. Using a suite of two-dimensional axisymmetric MHD simulations, we show that relatively slowly rotating magnetars with initial spin periods of ms spin down rapidly during the neutrino Kelvin-Helmholtz cooling epoch. These initial spin periods are representative of those inferred for normal Galactic pulsars, and much slower than those invoked for gamma-ray bursts and super-luminous supernovae. Since the flow is non-relativistic at early times, and because the Alfv\'en radius is much larger than the proto-magnetar radius, spindown is millions of times more efficient than the typically-used dipole formula. Quasi-periodic plasmoid ejections from the closed zone enhance spindown. For polar magnetic field strengths…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Particle accelerators and beam dynamics
