Multimessenger Prospects for Low-Luminosity Gamma-Ray Bursts: Joint Neutrino and X-Ray Observations
Wenkang Lian, He Gao, Shunke Ai, B. Theodore Zhang

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential for joint X-ray and neutrino observations of low-luminosity gamma-ray bursts using next-generation detectors, highlighting the conditions under which such multimessenger detections are feasible and their expected rates.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the detectability of LLGRBs in joint X-ray and neutrino observations, considering different magnetic scenarios and the impact of stacking multiple events.
Findings
Joint detection is possible for nearby LLGRBs with high luminosity.
Next-generation neutrino telescopes can detect about 1-2 events per year.
Stacking enhances detection prospects for a broader source population.
Abstract
Low--luminosity gamma-ray bursts (LLGRBs) are promising candidates for high-energy neutrinos, yet no coincident neutrino events have been detected so far. Recent advances in X-ray time-domain astronomy, together with the development of next-generation neutrino telescopes, open new opportunities for joint X-ray and neutrino observations of these transients. We calculate the jet dynamical evolution and the associated neutrino production for both non-magnetized and magnetized outflows. For individual events, joint X-ray and neutrino detection is generally limited to nearby LLGRBs or sources with high luminosities. Thus, we consider a next-generation neutrino telescope with an effective area enhanced by a factor of relative to IceCube. In the non-magnetized scenario, joint detection of individual events is enabled for sources with typical isotropic luminosities of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Neutrino Physics Research
