http://arxiv.org/abs/2209.07514
The origin of short gamma-ray bursts (sGRBs) is associated with outflows powered by the remnant of a binary neutron star merger. This remnant can be either a black hole or a highly magnetized, fastly spinning neutron star, also known as a magnetar. Here, we present the results of two relativistic magnetohydrodynamical (RMHD) simulations aimed at investigating the large-scale dynamics and propagation of magnetar collimated outflows through the environment surrounding the remnant. The first simulation evolves a realistic jet by injecting external simulation data, while the second evolves an analytical model jet with similar properties for comparison. We find that both outflows remain collimated and successfully emerge through the environment. However, they fail to attain relativistic velocities and only reach a mean maximum speed of ~0.7c for the realistic jet, and ~0.6c for the analytical jet. We also find that the realistic jet has a much more complex structure. The lack of highly relativistic speeds, that makes these jets unsuitable as short GRB sources, appears to be due to the specific injected properties and not general to all possible magnetar outflows.
G. Soares, P. Bosch, D. Lazzati, et. al.
Fri, 16 Sep 22
81/84
Comments: 9 pages, 6 figures, submitted to ApJ
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