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Millisecond Magnetars as GRB Central Engines. Thompson et al. 2004 Metzger et al. 2007, 2008a,b Bucciantini et al. 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Usov 1992 Thompson 1994 Wheeler et al. 2000. Todd Thompson The Ohio State University B. Metzger, N. Bucciantini , E. Quataert, P. Chang, J. Arons.
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Millisecond Magnetars as GRB Central Engines Thompson et al. 2004 Metzger et al. 2007, 2008a,b Bucciantini et al. 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Usov 1992 Thompson 1994 Wheeler et al. 2000 Todd ThompsonThe Ohio State UniversityB. Metzger, N. Bucciantini, E. Quataert, P. Chang, J. Arons
Piran’s questions circa 1999. “A nagging question in all these models is what produces the ‘observed’ ultra-relativistic flow? How are 10-5 Msun of baryons accelerated to an ultra-relativistic velocity with ~ 100 or larger? Why is the baryonic load so low? Why isn’t it lower? There is no simple model for that. An ingenious theoretical idea is clearly needed here.”
The Basic Character of GRBs • What is required? • Lorentz Factor: 100 < < 1000 (if internal shocks) • Timescale: ~ 10 - 100s (+ late-time activity +variability) • Total Energy: ~ 1051 ergs, highly asymmetric, supernovae
The Basic Character of GRBs • What is required? • Lorentz Factor: 100 < < 1000 (if internal shocks) • Timescale: ~ 10 - 100s (+ late-time activity +variability) • Total Energy: ~ 1051 ergs, highly asymmetric, supernovae • Kinetic luminosity ~ 1051 ergs / 10s ~ 1050 ergs s-1 • Mass loss rate ~ 1050 ergs s-1/ / c2 ~ 6 10-7 Msun s-1
The Basic Character of GRBs • What is required? • Lorentz Factor: 100 < < 1000 (if internal shocks) • Timescale: ~ 10 - 100s (+ late-time activity +variability) • Total Energy: ~ 1051 ergs, highly asymmetric, supernovae • Kinetic luminosity ~ 1051 ergs / 10s ~ 1050 ergs s-1 • Mass loss rate ~ 1050 ergs s-1/ / c2 ~ 6 10-7 Msun s-1 Piran:“Why is the baryonic load so low? Why isn’t it lower? There is no simple model for that.”
The Answer The characteristic mass-loss rate in the wind driven from the surface of a newly-born neutron star is (Duncan et al 1986; Qian & Woosley 1996) for a timescale of 10 -100 seconds. If a millisecond magnetar, the wind has kinetic luminosity of 1050 ergs/s, with ~ 102 - 103, (or magnetization of > 102 - 103).
The Progenitor Collapse Bounce, shock formation Prompt Shock Stalls (~ ms) R ~ 100 km Shock Revival & Explosion ~ 0.5 - 1 s KH cooling epoch, wind. Cooling Epoch Instability & Collapse Bounce
Collapse Bounce Stall Explosion Wind Cooling 300 km Burrows et al. (1995)
Wind Emergence: Common to All SN Explosions Supernova Shockwave Wind Scheck et al. (2006) Qian & Woosley (1996)
What about rotation and magnetic fields? Espanek, 1999
Magnetic Field: Sub-Dominant Dominant Initially, not magnetically-dominated, only ~10s later. Magnetar-strength fields dominate dynamics in the cooling/wind epoch! Rotation? C. Thompson (1994); T. Thompson (2003), T. Thompson et al. (2004) During Supernova t ~ 0 - 0.5 s t ~ 1 s t ~ 10 s
Stage I: Non-relativistic -Magneto-Centrifugal Winds RA - Radial B-field forces wind material to corotate to RA. At large distances, B dominates. • Increases both V∞ and • J & E & M loss rates. - Efficient spindown mechanism. - RA increases as L(t) • decreases in time. Schatzman (1962); Weber & Davis (1967)
Stage II: Relativistic -Magneto-Centrifugal Winds RA • RL = c/ bounds RA. • As RA approaches RL, • V∞ approaches c. RL
Stage II: Relativistic -Magneto-Centrifugal Winds RA • RL = c/ bounds RA. • As RA approaches RL, • V∞ approaches c. • = B2/(4c2) (~ ∞ ) • if efficient conversion • field dissipation. • (Drenkhahn & Spruit 02; Arons 07) RL
Stage II: Relativistic -Magneto-Centrifugal Winds RA • RL = c/ bounds RA. • As RA approaches RL, • V∞ approaches c. • = B2/(4c2) (~ ∞ ) • if efficient conversion • field dissipation. • (Drenkhahn & Spruit 02; Arons 07) • L(t) dictates evolution! RL
Neutron Star Birth in Real Time Theoretical calculations of proto-neutron star cooling provide expectations for the time evolution of luminosity. Also, SN 1987A! Pons et al. (1999)
Evolutionary Calculations Supernova Explosion Phase
Evolutionary Calculations Supernova Explosion Phase
Evolutionary Calculations Supernova Explosion Phase
Evolutionary Calculations Supernova Explosion Phase
Evolutionary Calculations Supernova Explosion Phase Non-Relativistic Relativistic Ultra-Relativistic Force-Free
What we’ve done • We solve the free 1-D equatorial non-relativistic neutrino-heated magneto-centrifugal wind problem for a ms-proto-magnetar. • Derive wind structure (T, , V, X ), the spindown rate, the mass loss rate -- given a monopole field geometry. (Thompson et al. 2001, 2004; Metzger et al. 2007, 2008a,b) • Solve the free 1-D and 2-D axisymmetric relativistic MHD wind problem in the regimes < 1 (non-relativistic) and > 1 (relativistic, magnetically dominated). • Assess 1-D assumptions! • Calculate spindown explicitly when >> 1, but with significant mass-loss (spindown is not “force-free,” not “vacuum” dipole, is not infinity, not Usov 1992!). • Calculate interaction of wind with the overlying progenitor. (Bucciantini et al. 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009)
Conclusion:Millisecond proto-magnetars drive winds with Exactly in the range needed for GRBs.What about asymmetry?
Jet Production • Wind hits spherical SN shockwave in ~ few seconds. • Creates reverse shock, contact discontinuity. • Residual Bphi squeezes (pinch force) flow. • Net polar acceleration. • Analogous to models of pulsar wind nebulae by Li & Begelman ‘92; Chevalier & Luo ‘93. See also Konigl & Granot ‘02; Komissarov & Lyubarsky 03,04; Uzdensky & MacFadyen ‘07; Nagataki ‘09).
Jet Production (Bucciantini et al. 07, 08, 09) jet jet 20 wind ~ 20 supernova Wind shocks on the outward-going SN shockwave at ~104 km, toroidal B exerts a pinch force that drives jet. Models are Poynting flux-dominated at breakout from progenitor.
Jet Production (Bucciantini et al. 09) • Magnetic dissipation in outflow is uncertain: consider both high & low magnetization limits. • Low- : wind(~RL) ~ jet(~ Rstar) • High- : If (~RL) ~ 60, then jet(~ Rstar) ~ 10 -15 (but, accelerating), magnetic field ~5 times equipartition. • Jet production robust in either case. • All of the spindown energy goes to the jet, virtually none goes to the spherical “supernova.” • For weaker winds, the reverse shock propagates back into the outflow, coupling the wind & bubble dynamics: not a “free” wind (see also Uzdensky & MacFadyen; Komissarov & Barkov). • Worries: 3D stability, entrainment, etc. (e.g., McKinney & Blandford)
Nucleosynthesis (Bucciantini et al. 09) • For most cases, not hot enough for significant excess 56Ni production. However, exact prediction is sensitive to timing of wind-bubble interaction. • However, we expect 10-2 Msun of Ne & O & C with v ~ 0.1 - 0.2c along the poles. • The power of the wind (B, P) is directly connected with abundance of nucleosynthetic products, their velocity distribution. Compare w/ Nagataki et al; Maeda et al; Mazzali et al
Summary • For magnetar B & ms P, everything works for GRBs. How? • Weak physics sets baryon loading of the wind. • B & P set Lorentz factor, magnetization, & kinetic luminosity. • Neutrino diffusion time sets characteristic timescale. • Interaction of wind with progenitor leads to collimation. • Robust to most uncertainties (e.g, magnetic dissipation) • Nucleosynthesis connected to timing, wind power, etc. • Association with supernovae is free. • Non-Association with supernovae? Maybe AIC of WD. • This model predicts well-defined (testable) correlations between these quantities in an average sense. They are not independent. • The model appeals to the idea that neutron stars are probably born with a range of B & P, implying a connection with normal supernovae (e.g., Soderberg). Diversity: B(P). • If you believe in the “Collapsar” mechanism, you (should) believe the ms-magnetar mechanism: angular momentum requirements.
The Present & Future • Wind & Spindown: • Couple physics more realistically to the supernova explosion, feedback effects on wind and magnetar torque in weak-wind limit • Does time dependence of outflow at magnetar surface imprint itself on the outflow dynamics of the jet at the progenitor surface? • Jets: Stability in 3D? Entrainment? • Lightcurves: • Use Lorentz factor, magnetization, opening angle, kinetic luminosity to predict prompt lightcurves (model-dependent). Try to make contact with observations. See Metzger et al. 2008: SGRBEEs!) • Late-time activity: power-source for plateau? Flares? (Dall’Osso et al. today; talk by Margutti) • LIMITATIONS: Energetics (e.g., Cenko et al. today): Maximum energy ~ few x 1052 ergs (e.g., 090926A)
The observation of a long-duration GRB does not imply black hole birth (necessarily).
EnergyLorentz FactorTimescaleCollimationLightcurves?
A Model for Short-Duration GRBs with “Extended Emission” GRB 060614 • Picture: WD/WD merger or AIC of a WD to a rapidly rotating magnetar. • SGRB: ~ 0.1Msun disk accretes on ~ 0.1-1s. Polar GRB as in NS-NS merger calculations. (e.g., Dessart et al. 07) • EE: Remaining magnetar spins down, drives wind. Gehrels et al. 2006 Gal-Yam et al. 2006
Short GRBs with Extended Emission Proto-magnetar winds can account for EE:s Metzger et al. (2008a)
More • Characteristics of the model: • As time increases, degree of relativity increases. • As time increases, energy loss rate decreases. • A magnetar is left behind. Late-time activity? Flares? • Maximum total GRB energy: ~ 5 1052 ergs. Gravity waves. (e.g., Cenko et al. 2009) • Some questions: • Magnetic dissipation? • What is the nature of SN-less long-duration GRBs? AIC? • What is the nature of the short-duration GRBs with extended emission? AIC? • Can we predict prompt lightcurves? (model-dependence) • With energy & Lorentz factor & jet opening angle, can we calculate character of afterglow? Yes.