THE ANGULAR MOMENTA OF NEUTRON STARS AND BLACK HOLES AS A WINDOW ON SUPERNOVAE

被引:22
作者
Miller, J. M. [1 ]
Miller, M. C. [2 ]
Reynolds, C. S. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Michigan, Dept Astron, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[2] Univ Maryland, Dept Astron, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
关键词
accretion; accretion disks; black hole physics; gamma-ray burst: general; stars: evolution; stars: neutron; supernovae: general; ROTATING SUPERMASSIVE STAR; GAMMA-RAY BURSTS; ACCRETION DISKS; PRESUPERNOVA EVOLUTION; ENERGY EXTRACTION; MASSIVE STARS; XMM-NEWTON; SPIN; REFLECTION; BIRTH;
D O I
10.1088/2041-8205/731/1/L5
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
It is now clear that a subset of supernovae displays evidence for jets and is observed as gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). The angular momentum distribution of massive stellar endpoints provides a rare means of constraining the nature of the central engine in core-collapse explosions. Unlike supermassive black holes, the spin of stellar-mass black holes in X-ray binary systems is little affected by accretion and accurately reflects the spin set at birth. A modest number of stellar-mass black hole angular momenta have now been measured using two independent X-ray spectroscopic techniques. In contrast, rotation-powered pulsars spin down over time, via magnetic braking, but a modest number of natal spin periods have now been estimated. For both canonical and extreme neutron star parameters, statistical tests strongly suggest that the angular momentum distributions of black holes and neutron stars are markedly different. Within the context of prevalent models for core-collapse supernovae, the angular momentum distributions are consistent with black holes typically being produced in GRB-like supernovae with jets and with neutron stars typically being produced in supernovae with too little angular momentum to produce jets via magnetohydrodynamic processes. It is possible that neutron stars are with high spin initially and rapidly spun down shortly after the supernova event, but the available mechanisms may be inconsistent with some observed pulsar properties.
引用
收藏
页数:5
相关论文
共 45 条
[1]   A new class of unstable modes of rotating relativistic stars [J].
Andersson, N .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1998, 502 (02) :708-713
[2]   Gravitational radiation limit on the spin of young neutron stars [J].
Andersson, N ;
Kokkotas, K ;
Schutz, BF .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1999, 510 (02) :846-853
[3]   Saturation of the r-mode instability [J].
Arras, P ;
Flanagan, EE ;
Morsink, S ;
Schenk, AK ;
Teukolsky, SA ;
Wasserman, I .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2003, 591 (02) :1129-1151
[4]   ROTATING BLACK HOLES - LOCALLY NONROTATING FRAMES, ENERGY EXTRACTION, AND SCALAR SYNCHROTRON RADIATION [J].
BARDEEN, JM ;
TEUKOLSKY, SA ;
PRESS, WH .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1972, 178 (02) :347-+
[5]   KERR METRIC BLACK HOLES [J].
BARDEEN, JM .
NATURE, 1970, 226 (5240) :64-&
[6]   The unusual afterglow of the γ-ray burst of 26 March 1998 as evidence for a supernova connection [J].
Bloom, JS ;
Kulkarni, SR ;
Djorgovski, SG ;
Eichelberger, AC ;
Côté, P ;
Blakeslee, JP ;
Odewahn, SC ;
Harrison, FA ;
Frail, DA ;
Filippenko, AV ;
Leonard, DC ;
Riess, AG ;
Spinrad, H ;
Stern, D ;
Bunker, R ;
Dey, A ;
Grossan, B ;
Perlmutter, S ;
Knop, RA ;
Hook, IM ;
Feroci, M .
NATURE, 1999, 401 (6752) :453-456
[7]   MEASURING THE SPIN OF GRS 1915+105 WITH RELATIVISTIC DISK REFLECTION [J].
Blum, J. L. ;
Miller, J. M. ;
Fabian, A. C. ;
Miller, M. C. ;
Homan, J. ;
van der Klis, M. ;
Cackett, E. M. ;
Reis, R. C. .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2009, 706 (01) :60-66
[8]   A two-solar-mass neutron star measured using Shapiro delay [J].
Demorest, P. B. ;
Pennucci, T. ;
Ransom, S. M. ;
Roberts, M. S. E. ;
Hessels, J. W. T. .
NATURE, 2010, 467 (7319) :1081-1083
[9]   Advection-dominated accretion and the spectral states of black hole X-ray binaries: Application to Nova Muscae 1991 [J].
Esin, AA ;
McClintock, JE ;
Narayan, R .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1997, 489 (02) :865-889
[10]   Birth and evolution of isolated radio pulsars [J].
Faucher-Giguere, Claude-Andre ;
Kaspi, Victoria M. .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2006, 643 (01) :332-355