Unsteady outflow models for cosmological gamma-ray bursts
@article{Rees1994UnsteadyOM, title={Unsteady outflow models for cosmological gamma-ray bursts}, author={Martin J. Rees and P{\'e}ter M{\'e}sz{\'a}ros}, journal={The Astrophysical Journal}, year={1994}, volume={430} }
The 'event' that triggers a gamma-ray burst cannot last for more than a few seconds. This is, however, long compared with the dynamical timescale of a compact stellar-mass object (approximately 10 (exp-3) s). Energy is assumed to be released as an outflow with high mean Lorentz factor Gamma. But a compact stellar-mass collapse or merger is, realistically, likely to generate a mass (or energy) flux that is unsteady on some timescales in the range 10(exp -3) - 10 s. If Gamma fluctuates by a…
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273 This figure "fig1-1.png" is available in "png
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Acknowledgements: This research has been partially supported through NASA NAGW- 1522, NAG5-2362 and by the Royal Society
- Acknowledgements: This research has been partially supported through NASA NAGW- 1522, NAG5-2362 and by the Royal Society
Caption Fig. 1: Wind regimes as a function of η = L/Ṁc2 and r/ctdyn. The lines above which the wind becomes optically thin to scattering (due to Ṁ) has a slope
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