Collapsar Black Holes are Likely Born Slowly Spinning
Ore Gottlieb, Jonatan Jacquemin-Ide, Beverly Lowell, Alexander, Tchekhovskoy, Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz

TL;DR
This paper suggests that black holes formed in collapsars are likely born with slow spins, based on jet power observations and simulations, which has implications for understanding GRB origins and black hole spin evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first 3D GRMHD simulations of collapsar jets powered by slowly spinning black holes, supporting the hypothesis of low natal spins.
Findings
Most BHs with jets are likely born with spins around 0.2.
Jets from slowly spinning BHs often struggle to escape the star.
The results align with gravitational-wave observations of BH spins.
Abstract
Collapsing stars constitute the main black hole (BH) formation channel, and are occasionally associated with the launch of relativistic jets that power -ray bursts (GRBs). Thus, collapsars offer an opportunity to infer the natal (before spin-up/down by accretion) BH spin directly from observations. We show that once the BH saturates with large-scale magnetic flux, the jet power is dictated by the BH spin and mass accretion rate. Core-collapse simulations by Halevi et al. 2023 and GRB observations favor stellar density profiles that yield an accretion rate , weakly dependent on time. This leaves the spin as the main factor that governs the jet power. By comparing the jet power to characteristic GRB luminosities, we find that the majority of BHs associated with jets are likely born slowly spinning with a dimensionless spin $ a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
