Transient stellar collisions as multimessenger probes: Non-thermal-, gravitational wave emission and the cosmic ladder argument
Pau Amaro Seoane

TL;DR
This paper explores stellar collisions in dense clusters as sources of multimessenger signals, analyzing their electromagnetic and gravitational wave emissions, and discusses implications for cosmic distance measurements and transient event classification.
Contribution
It introduces detailed models of stellar collision rates, electromagnetic signatures, and gravitational wave emissions, highlighting their potential to mimic supernovae and impact cosmological measurements.
Findings
MS collision rate up to tens per year
RG collision rate an order of magnitude higher
Collision signatures resemble supernovae or tidal disruption events
Abstract
In dense stellar clusters like galactic nuclei and globular clusters stellar densities are so high that stars might physically collide with each other. In galactic nuclei the energy and power output can be close, and even exceed, to those from supernovae events. We address the event rate and the electromagnetic characteristics of collisions of main sequence stars (MS) and red giants (RG). We also investigate the case in which the cores form a binary and emit gravitational waves. In the case of RGs this is particularly interesting because the cores are degenerate. We find that MS event rate can be as high as tens per year, and that of RGs one order of magnitude larger. The collisions are powerful enough to mimic supernovae- or tidal disruptions events. We find Zwicky Transient Facility observational data which seem to exhibit the features we describe. The cores embedded in the gaseous…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
