2013
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201322165
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Long gamma ray bursts from binary black holes

Abstract: Aims. We consider a scenario for the longest duration gamma ray bursts, resulting from the collapse of a massive rotating star in a close binary system with a companion black hole (BH). Methods. The primary BH born during the core collapse is first being spun up and increases its mass during the fallback of the stellar envelope just after its birth. As the companion BH enters the outer envelope, it provides an additional angular momentum to the gas. After the infall and spiral-in toward the primary, the two BH… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…In principle, mergers of binary BHs may be associated with an electromagnetic emission (a GRB), if a sufficient supply of matter for the accretion is involved at any stage of the merger, or after the GW event. As hypothesized in our previous work [4], a merger of a massive, rotating star with a companion BH, in a system that evolved from a high mass X-ray binary, may result in the collapse of the star's core. The merger of the collapsed core, which is a newly formed BH, with its companion, would be then the source of a transient emission seen in GWs.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…In principle, mergers of binary BHs may be associated with an electromagnetic emission (a GRB), if a sufficient supply of matter for the accretion is involved at any stage of the merger, or after the GW event. As hypothesized in our previous work [4], a merger of a massive, rotating star with a companion BH, in a system that evolved from a high mass X-ray binary, may result in the collapse of the star's core. The merger of the collapsed core, which is a newly formed BH, with its companion, would be then the source of a transient emission seen in GWs.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…The two BH masses are determined by the signal, and this may be an independent method to measure the mass of GRB central BHs (see, e.g. an earlier investigation by Janiuk et al 2013a).…”
Section: Conclusion and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our model invokes coalescence of a collapsing star's nucleus that forms a BH, with its companion BH in a binary system [12,30]. We find that the recoil velocity acquired by the final BH through the GW emission allows it to take only a small fraction of matter from the host star, provided specific configuration of the binary spin vectors with the orbital angular momentum.…”
Section: Gravitational Wave Source Gw150914mentioning
confidence: 95%