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arxiv: astro-ph/9905337 · v1 · submitted 1999-05-26 · 🌌 astro-ph

Brightness from the Blackest Night: Bursts of Gamma Rays and Gravity Waves from Black Hole Binaries

classification 🌌 astro-ph
keywords blackburstseventholebinariesgamma-raygravity-wavehigher
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We use recent results in binary stellar evolution to argue that binaries with at least one black hole dominate the rate of compact-object mergers. Two phenomena generally attributable to such mergers, gamma-ray bursts and gravity-wave bursts, are therefore likely to originate from near the event horizon of a black hole. In addition to sheer numbers, black holes have an added advantage over neutron stars in both phenomena. For gamma-ray bursts, the presence of an event horizon eases the baryon pollution problem, because energy can be stored into rotation until most baryons have been swallowed, and then released into a cleaner environment via the Blandford-Znajek process. For gravity-wave bursts, black holes offer higher luminosities due to their higher masses, thus enabling detection out to larger distances, which leads to a 30-fold increase in the predicted LIGO event rate.

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