http://arxiv.org/abs/2003.03597
The observations of GW170817/GRB170817A have confirmed that the coalescence of a neutron-star binary is the progenitor of a short gamma-ray burst. In the standard picture of a short gamma-ray burst, a collimated highly relativistic outflow is launched after merger and it successfully breaks out from the surrounding ejected matter. Using initial conditions inspired from numerical-relativity binary neutron-star merger simulations, we have performed general-relativistic hydrodynamic (HD) and magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations in which the jet is launched and propagates self-consistently. The complete set of simulations suggests that: (i) MHD jets have an intrinsic energy and velocity polar structure with a “hollow core” subtending an angle $\theta_{\rm core}\approx4^{\circ}-5^{\circ}$ and an opening angle of $\theta_{\rm jet}\gtrsim10^{\circ}$; (ii) MHD jets eject significant amounts of matter and two orders of magnitude more than HD jets; (iii) the energy stratification in MHD jets naturally yields the power-law energy scaling $E(>\Gamma\beta)\propto(\Gamma\beta)^{-4.5}$; (iv) MHD jets provide fits to the afterglow data from GRB170817A that are comparatively better than those of the HD jets and without free parameters; (v) finally, both of the best-fit HD/MHD models suggest an observation angle $\theta_{\rm obs} \simeq 21^{\circ}$ for GRB170817A.
A. Nathanail, R. Gill, O. Porth, et. al.
Tue, 10 Mar 20
25/63
Comments: 9 pages, 5 figures, submitted
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