On the Efficiency of Producing Gamma-Ray Bursts from Isolated Population III Stars
Gibran Morales-Rivera, Ramandeep Gill, S. Jane Arthur, Paz Beniamini, Jonathan Granot

TL;DR
This study models the conditions under which isolated Population III stars could produce gamma-ray bursts, estimating their efficiency and potential observable rates, and discusses implications for stellar evolution scenarios.
Contribution
It provides a detailed grid of stellar evolution models for Pop III stars, quantifies GRB production efficiency, and assesses the impact of stellar wind and rotation on GRB likelihood.
Findings
Pop III GRB efficiency is approximately 10^{-5} to 3×10^{-4} per solar mass.
Estimated all-sky GRB rate is 2-40 per year for Swift detection.
Higher wind efficiencies reduce the likelihood of Pop III stars producing GRBs.
Abstract
The rate of long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) from isolated Pop III stars is not well known, as it depends on our poor understanding of their initial mass function (IMF), rotation rates, stellar evolution, and mass loss. Some massive () Pop III stars are expected to suffer core-collapse and launch a relativistic jet that would power a GRB. In the collapsar scenario, a key requirement is that the pre-supernova star imparts sufficient angular momentum to the remnant black hole to form an accretion disc and launch a relativistic jet, which demands rapid initial rotation of the progenitor star and suppression of line-driven mass loss during its chemically homogeneous evolution. Here we explore a grid of stellar evolution models of Pop III stars with masses , which are initially rotating with surface angular velocities…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
