摘要
The induced gravitational collapse paradigm explains a class of energetic, E-iso greater than or similar to 10(52) erg, long-duration gammaray bursts (GRBs) associated with Ic supernovae, recently named binary-driven hypernovae. The progenitor is a tight binary system formed of a carbon-oxygen (CO) core and a neutron star (NS) companion. The supernova ejecta of the exploding CO core trigger a hypercritical accretion process onto the NS, which reaches the critical mass in a few seconds, and gravitationally collapses to a black hole, emitting a GRB. In our previous simulations of this process, we adopted a spherically symmetric approximation to compute the features of the hypercritical accretion process. We here present the first estimates of the angular momentum transported by the supernova ejecta, L-acc, and perform numerical simulations of the angular momentum transfer to the NS during the hyperaccretion process in full general relativity. We show that the NS (1) reaches either the mass-shedding limit or the secular axisymmetric instability in a few seconds depending on its initial mass, (2) reaches a maximum dimensionless angular momentum value, [cJ/(GM(2))](max) approximate to 0.7 (3) max, and (3) can support less angular momentum than the one transported by supernova ejecta, L-acc > J(NS,max), hence there is an angular momentum excess that necessarily leads to jetted emission.
- 出版日期2015-10-20
- 单位Los Alamos