ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Neutron star mergers are unique laboratories of accretion, ejection, and r-process nucleosynthesis. We used 3D general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations to study the role of the post-merger magnetic geometry in the evolution of merger remnant discs around stationary Kerr black holes. Our simulations fully capture mass accretion, ejection, and jet production, owing to their exceptionally long duration exceeding $4$ s. Poloidal post-merger magnetic field configurations produce jets with energies $E_mathrm{jet} sim (4{-}30)times10^{50}$ erg, isotropic equivalent energies $E_mathrm{iso}sim(4{-}20)times10^{52}$ erg, opening angles $theta_mathrm{jet}sim6{-}13^circ$, and durations $t_jlesssim1$ s. Accompanying the production of jets is the ejection of $f_mathrm{ej}sim30{-}40%$ of the post-merger disc mass, continuing out to times $> 1$ s. We discover that a more natural, purely toroidal post-merger magnetic field geometry generates large-scale poloidal magnetic flux of alternating polarity and striped jets. The first stripe, of $E_mathrm{jet}simeq2times10^{48},mathrm{erg}$, $E_mathrm{iso}sim10^{51}$ erg, $theta_mathrm{jet}sim3.5{-}5^circ$, and $t_jsim0.1$ s, is followed by $gtrsim4$ s of striped jet activity with $f_mathrm{ej}simeq27%$. The dissipation of such stripes could power the short gamma-ray burst (sGRB) prompt emission. Our simulated jet energies and durations span the range of sGRBs. We find that although the blue kilonova component is initially hidden from view by the red component, it expands faster, outruns the red component, and becomes visible to off-axis observers. In comparison to GW 170817/GRB 170817A, our simulations under-predict the mass of the blue relative to red component by a factor of few. Including the dynamical ejecta and neutrino absorption may reduce this tension.
We study evolution of isolated neutron stars on long time scale and calculate distribution of these sources in the main evolutionary stages: Ejector, Propeller, Accretor, and Georotator. We compare different initial magnetic field distributions takin
We propose a general method to self-consistently study the quasistationary evolution of the magnetic field in the cores of neutron stars. The traditional approach to this problem is critically revised. Our results are illustrated by calculation of th
The first neutron star-neutron star (NS-NS) merger was discovered on August 17, 2017 through gravitational waves (GW170817) and followed with electromagnetic observations. This merger was detected in an old elliptical galaxy with no recent star forma
Two neutron stars merge somewhere in the Universe approximately every 10 seconds, creating violent explosions observable in gravitational waves and across the electromagnetic spectrum. The transformative coincident gravitational-wave and electromagne
Neutron stars are natural physical laboratories allowing us to study a plethora of phenomena in extreme conditions. In particular, these compact objects can have very strong magnetic fields with non-trivial origin and evolution. In many respects its