Relativistic jets from millisecond proto-magnetars
Dhruv K. Desai, Luciano Combi, Daniel M. Siegel, Brian D. Metzger

TL;DR
This study uses 3D general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations to show that millisecond proto-magnetars can produce structured, relativistic jets shortly after formation, supporting their role as engines of gamma-ray bursts and related phenomena.
Contribution
First 3D GRMHD simulations incorporating neutrino transport demonstrate jet formation and collimation in millisecond proto-magnetars, revealing multidimensional effects and angular energy stratification.
Findings
Centrifugal forces enhance equatorial mass loss in rapidly rotating models.
Structured bipolar jets with high magnetization form within seconds of proto-magnetar birth.
Jets exhibit angular stratification consistent with observed GRB and supernova energies.
Abstract
Rapidly rotating, strongly magnetized neutron stars (``millisecond proto-magnetars'') formed in stellar core-collapse, neutron star mergers, and white dwarf accretion-induced collapse have long been proposed as central engines of gamma-ray bursts (GRB) and accompanying supernovae/kilonovae. However, during the first few seconds after birth, neutrino heating drives baryon-rich winds from the neutron star surface, potentially limiting the magnetization and achievable Lorentz factors of the outflow and casting doubt on whether proto-magnetars can launch ultra-relativistic jets at early times, as needed to power short-duration GRB. We present 3D general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations of neutrino-heated proto-magnetar winds that incorporate M0 neutrino transport. While the global wind properties broadly agree with previous analytic estimates calibrated to one-dimensional…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
