Helium Star/Black Hole Mergers: a New Gamma-Ray Burst Model
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We present a model for gamma-ray bursts (GRB's) in which a stellar mass black hole acquires a massive accretion disk by merging with the helium core of its red giant companion. The black hole enters the helium core after it, or its neutron star progenitor, first experiences a common envelope phase that carries it inwards through the hydrogen envelope. Accretion of the last several solar masses of helium occurs on a time scale of roughly a minute and provides a neutrino luminosity of approximately 10^51 - 10^52 erg/s. Neutrino annihilation, 0.01% to 0.1% efficient, along the rotational axis then gives a baryon loaded fireball of electron-positron pairs and radiation (about 10$^{50}$ erg total) whose beaming and relativistic interaction with circumstellar material makes the GRB (e.g., Rees & Meszaros 1992). The useful energy can be greatly increased if energy can be extracted from the rotational energy of the black hole by magnetic interaction with the disk. Such events should occur at a rate comparable to that of merging neutron stars and black hole neutron star pairs and may be responsible for long complex GRB's, but not short hard ones.
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Cited by 1 Pith paper
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Hyperaccreting Neutron Stars inside Massive Envelopes: The Implausibility of Thorne-\.Zytkow Objects
Hypercritical accretion onto neutron stars embedded in massive envelopes leads to rapid collapse into black holes rather than stable Thorne-Zytkow objects.
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