Основні поняття
GRB 230307A, despite its long duration, likely originates from a compact star merger and provides the first direct observational evidence of a magnetar central engine powering a gamma-ray burst.
Анотація
This research paper presents the discovery and analysis of GRB 230307A, a peculiar gamma-ray burst (GRB) with a surprisingly long duration. Despite this, multiple lines of evidence, including its association with a kilonova and its position on various correlation diagrams, strongly suggest that it originated from a compact star merger.
Key Findings:
- GRB 230307A exhibited an extended X-ray emission component that emerged as the gamma-ray emission faded.
- This X-ray emission component's light curve and spectral characteristics align with the theoretical predictions of a rapidly spinning, highly magnetized neutron star known as a magnetar.
- The simultaneous observation of the GRB in both X-ray and gamma-ray energies provides the first direct evidence of a magnetar central engine powering a GRB.
Significance:
- The discovery has significant implications for our understanding of the engines that power GRBs, particularly those associated with compact star mergers.
- It provides crucial constraints on the equation of state for neutron stars, suggesting a relatively stiff equation of state.
- The findings challenge current theoretical models that struggle to explain the formation of relativistic jets from newborn magnetars.
Limitations and Future Research:
- The exact nature of the progenitor system, whether it was a binary neutron star merger or a white dwarf-neutron star merger, remains unclear.
- Further research and multi-messenger observations of similar events are needed to fully unravel the mechanisms behind these peculiar GRBs and their magnetar engines.
Bibliographic Information:
Sun, H., Wang, C.-W., Yang, J., Zhang, B.-B., Xiong, S.-L., Yin, Y.-H. I., ... & Zhang, B. (2024). Magnetar emergence in a peculiar gamma-ray burst from a compact star merger. Preprint, arXiv:2307.05689v2.
Статистика
GRB 230307A had a T90 duration of 41.52 seconds in the 10-1000 keV energy range.
The burst's peak flux was 4.26 x 10^-4 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
The soft X-ray emission in the 0.5-4 keV band lasted for over 250 seconds.
The best-fit magnetar model yielded a dipole magnetic field of 2.1 x 10^16 G and an initial spin period of 3.3 ms.
The estimated jet opening angle was ~3.4 degrees.
Цитати
"Intriguingly, an extended X-ray emission component shows up as the γ-ray emission dies out, signifying the likely emergence of a magnetar central engine."
"GRB 230307A marks the first simultaneous observation of a compact object merger in both X-ray and gamma-ray energies."
"The identification of a magnetar engine from a merger event suggests that the neutron star (NS) equation of state is relatively stiff."