685 research outputs found

    GRMHD simulations of prompt-collapse neutron star mergers: the absence of jets

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    Inspiraling and merging binary neutron stars are not only important source of gravitational waves, but also promising candidates for coincident electromagnetic counterparts. These systems are thought to be progenitors of short gamma-ray bursts (sGRBs). We have shown previously that binary neutron star mergers that undergo {\it delayed} collapse to a black hole surrounded by a {\it weighty} magnetized accretion disk can drive magnetically-powered jets. We now perform magnetohydrodynamic simulations in full general relativity of binary neutron stars mergers that undergo {\it prompt} collapse to explore the possibility of jet formation from black hole-{\it light} accretion disk remnants. We find that after t−tBH∼26(MNS/1.8M⊙)t-t_{\rm BH}\sim 26(M_{\rm NS}/1.8M_\odot)ms [MNSM_{\rm NS} is the ADM mass] following prompt black hole formation, there is no evidence of mass outflow or magnetic field collimation. The rapid formation of the black hole following merger prevents magnetic energy from approaching force-free values above the magnetic poles, which is required for the launching of a jet by the usual Blandford--Znajek mechanism. Detection of gravitational waves in coincidence with sGRBs may provide constraints on the nuclear equation of state (EOS): the fate of an NSNS merger--delayed or prompt collapse, and hence the appearance or nonappearance of an sGRB--depends on a critical value of the total mass of the binary, and this value is sensitive to the EOS.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, matches published versio

    Outer boundary conditions for Einstein's field equations in harmonic coordinates

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    We analyze Einstein's vacuum field equations in generalized harmonic coordinates on a compact spatial domain with boundaries. We specify a class of boundary conditions, which is constraint-preserving and sufficiently general to include recent proposals for reducing the amount of spurious reflections of gravitational radiation. In particular, our class comprises the boundary conditions recently proposed by Kreiss and Winicour, a geometric modification thereof, the freezing-Ψ0 boundary condition and the hierarchy of absorbing boundary conditions introduced by Buchman and Sarbach. Using the recent technique developed by Kreiss and Winicour based on an appropriate reduction to a pseudo-differential first-order system, we prove well posedness of the resulting initial-boundary value problem in the frozen coefficient approximation. In view of the theory of pseudo-differential operators, it is expected that the full nonlinear problem is also well posed. Furthermore, we implement some of our boundary conditions numerically and study their effectiveness in a test problem consisting of a perturbed Schwarzschild black hole

    Regularization of spherical and axisymmetric evolution codes in numerical relativity

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    Several interesting astrophysical phenomena are symmetric with respect to the rotation axis, like the head-on collision of compact bodies, the collapse and/or accretion of fields with a large variety of geometries, or some forms of gravitational waves. Most current numerical relativity codes, however, can not take advantage of these symmetries due to the fact that singularities in the adapted coordinates, either at the origin or at the axis of symmetry, rapidly cause the simulation to crash. Because of this regularity problem it has become common practice to use full-blown Cartesian three-dimensional codes to simulate axi-symmetric systems. In this work we follow a recent idea idea of Rinne and Stewart and present a simple procedure to regularize the equations both in spherical and axi-symmetric spaces. We explicitly show the regularity of the evolution equations, describe the corresponding numerical code, and present several examples clearly showing the regularity of our evolutions.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures. Several changes. Main corrections are in eqs. (2.12) and (5.14). Accepted in Gen. Rel. Gra

    Jet launching from binary black hole-neutron star mergers: Dependence on black hole spin, binary mass ratio and magnetic field orientation

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    Black hole-neutron star (BHNS) mergers are one of the most promising targets for multimessenger astronomy. Using general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations of BHNS undergoing merger we showed that a magnetically--driven jet can be launched by the remnant if the NS is endowed with a dipole B field extending from the interior into the exterior as in a radio pulsar. These self-consistent studies considered a BHNS system with mass ratio q=3:1q=3:1, BH spin a/MBH=0.75a/M_{BH}=0.75 aligned with the total orbital angular momentum (OAM), and a NS that is irrotational, threaded by an aligned B field, and modeled by an Γ\Gamma--law equation of state with Γ=2\Gamma=2. Here, as a crucial step in establishing BHNS systems as viable progenitors of central engines that power short gamma--ray bursts (sGRBs) and thereby solidify their role as multimessenger sources, we survey different BHNS configurations that differ in BH spin (a/MBH=−0.5, 0, 0.5, 0.75a/M_{BH} =-0.5,\,0,\,0.5,\,0.75), in the mass ratio (q=3:1q=3:1 and q=5:1q=5:1), and in the orientation of the B field (aligned and tilted by 90∘90^\circ with respect to the OAM). We find that by Δt∼3500M−4000M∼88(MNS/1.4M⊙)ms−100(MNS/1.4M⊙)ms\Delta t\sim 3500M-4000M \sim 88(M_{NS}/1.4M_\odot){\rm ms}-100(M_{NS}/1.4M_\odot)\rm ms after the peak gravitational wave signal a jet is launched in the cases where the initial BH spin is a/MBH=0.5a/M_{BH}= 0.5 or 0.750.75. The lifetime of the jets[Δt∼0.5(MNS/1.4M⊙)s−0.7(MNS/1.4M⊙)s\Delta t\sim 0.5(M_{NS}/1.4M_\odot){\rm s-0.7}(M_{NS}/1.4M_\odot)\rm s] and their Poynting luminosities [Ljet∼1051±1erg/sL_{jet}\sim 10^{51\pm 1}\rm erg/s] are consistent with sGRBs, as well as with the Blandford--Znajek mechanism. By the time we terminate our simulations, we do not observe either an outflow or a large-scale B field collimation in the other configurations we simulate. These results suggest that future multimessenger detections from BHNSs are more likely produced by binaries with highly spinning BH companions and small tilt-angle B fields.Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures. Added references, matches published versio

    Magnetic Braking and Damping of Differential Rotation in Massive Stars

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    Fragmentation of highly differentially rotating massive stars that undergo collapse has been suggested as a possible channel for binary black hole formation. Such a scenario could explain the formation of the new population of massive black holes detected by the LIGO/VIRGO gravitational wave laser interferometers. We probe that scenario by performing general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations of differentially rotating massive stars supported by thermal radiation pressure plus a gas pressure perturbation. The stars are initially threaded by a dynamically weak, poloidal magnetic field confined to the stellar interior. We find that magnetic braking and turbulent viscous damping via magnetic winding and the magnetorotational instability in the bulk of the star redistribute angular momentum, damp differential rotation and induce the formation of a massive and nearly uniformly rotating inner core surrounded by a Keplerian envelope. The core + disk configuration evolves on a secular timescale and remains in quasi-stationary equilibrium until the termination of our simulations. Our results suggest that the high degree of differential rotation required for m=2m=2 seed density perturbations to trigger gas fragmentation and binary black hole formation is likely to be suppressed during the normal lifetime of the star prior to evolving to the point of dynamical instability to collapse. Other cataclysmic events, such as stellar mergers leading to collapse, may therefore be necessary to reestablish sufficient differential rotation and density perturbations to drive nonaxisymmetric modes leading to binary black hole formation.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. Minor changes, matches published versio

    Simulating the Magnetorotational Collapse of Supermassive Stars: Incorporating Gas Pressure Perturbations and Different Rotation Profiles

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    Collapsing supermassive stars (SMSs) with masses M≳104−6M⊙M \gtrsim 10^{4-6}M_\odot have long been speculated to be the seeds that can grow and become supermassive black holes (SMBHs). We previously performed GRMHD simulations of marginally stable magnetized Γ=4/3\Gamma = 4/3 polytropes uniformly rotating at the mass-shedding limit to model the direct collapse of SMSs. These configurations are supported entirely by thermal radiation pressure and model SMSs with M≳106M⊙M \gtrsim 10^{6}M_\odot. We found that around 90%90\% of the initial stellar mass forms a spinning black hole (BH) surrounded by a massive, hot, magnetized torus, which eventually launches an incipient jet. Here we perform GRMHD simulations of Γ≳4/3\Gamma \gtrsim 4/3, polytropes to account for the perturbative role of gas pressure in SMSs with M≲106M⊙M \lesssim 10^{6}M_\odot. We also consider different initial stellar rotation profiles. The stars are initially seeded with a dynamically weak dipole magnetic field that is either confined to the stellar interior or extended from its interior into the stellar exterior. We find that the mass of the BH remnant is 90%−99%90\%-99\% of the initial stellar mass, depending sharply on Γ−4/3\Gamma -4/3 as well as on the initial stellar rotation profile. After t∼250−550M≈1−2×103(M/106M⊙)t\sim 250-550M\approx 1-2\times 10^3(M/10^6M_\odot)s following the BH formation, a jet is launched and it lasts for ∼104−105(M/106M⊙)\sim 10^4-10^5(M/10^6M_\odot)s, consistent with the duration of long gamma-ray bursts. Our results suggest that the Blandford-Znajek mechanism powers the jet. They are also in agreement with our proposed universal model that estimates accretion rates and luminosities that characterize magnetized BH-disk remnant systems that launch a jet. This model helps explain why the outgoing luminosities for vastly different BH-disk formation scenarios all reside within a narrow range (∼1052±1erg/s\sim 10^{52 \pm 1} \rm erg/s), roughly independent of MM.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures. Added references, matches published versio

    GW170817, General Relativistic Magnetohydrodynamic Simulations, and the Neutron Star Maximum Mass

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    Recent numerical simulations in general relativistic magnetohydrodynamics (GRMHD) provide useful constraints for the interpretation of the GW170817 discovery. Combining the observed data with these simulations leads to a bound on the maximum mass of a cold, spherical neutron star (the TOV limit): Mmaxsph≲2.74/β{M_{\rm max}^{\rm sph}}\lesssim 2.74/\beta, where β\beta is the ratio of the maximum mass of a uniformly rotating neutron star (the supramassive limit) over the maximum mass of a nonrotating star. Causality arguments allow β\beta to be as high as 1.271.27, while most realistic candidate equations of state predict β\beta to be closer to 1.21.2, yielding Mmaxsph{M_{\rm max}^{\rm sph}} in the range 2.16−2.28M⊙2.16-2.28 M_\odot. A minimal set of assumptions based on these simulations distinguishes this analysis from previous ones, but leads to a similar estimate. There are caveats, however, and they are enumerated and discussed. The caveats can be removed by further simulations and analysis to firm up the basic argument.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. Matches published versio
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