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      The Progenitors of Short Gamma-Ray Bursts

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          Abstract

          Recent months have witnessed dramatic progress in our understanding of SGRBs. There is now general agreement that SGRBs can produce directed outflows of relativistic matter with a kinetic luminosity exceeding by many millions that of AGN. The requirements of energy and compactness indicate that SGRB activity can be ascribed to a modest fraction of a solar mass of gas accreting onto a stellar mass BH or to a precursor stage leading inevitably to such an object. Scenarios involving the birth of a rapidly rotating NS, or an accreting BH in a merging binary driven by gravitational waves are reviewed, along with possible alternatives (collisions or collapse of compact objects). If a BH lies at the center of this activity, the fundamental pathways through which mass, angular momentum and energy can flow around and away from it play a key role in understanding how these prime movers can form collimated relativistic outflows. Hypercritical flows near BHs, where photons cannot supply the cooling, but neutrinos do so efficiently, are discussed in detail, and we believe that they offer the best hope of understanding the central engine. On the other hand, statistical investigations of SGRB niches provide valuable information on their nature and evolutionary behavior. In addition, compelling evidence now points to the continuous fueling of SGRB sources. We suggest that the observed late flaring activity could be due to a secondary accretion episode induced by the fall back of material stripped from a compact object during a merger or collision. Important open questions are identified, along with the types of observation that would discriminate among various models. SGRB jets may be one of the few observable consequences of how flows near nuclear density behave under the influence of strong gravitational fields. (abridged)

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          Short-living supermassive magnetar model for the early X-ray flares following short GRBs

          W Gao, Y Z Fan (2005)
          We suggest a short-living supermassive magnetar model to account for the X-ray flares following short \(\gamma-\)ray bursts. In this model, the central engine of the short \(\gamma-\)ray bursts is a supermassive millisecond magnetar. The X-ray flares are powered by the dipole radiation of the magnetar. When the magnetar has lost a significant part of its angular momentum, it collapses to a black hole and the X-ray flares disappear abruptly. Two important predictions of this model are (i) X-ray flares much more energetic than that detected in GRB 050724 may be detectable in the coming months and years by the XRT onboard {\it Swift}. (ii) The short GRBs with X-ray flares may occur outside of their host galaxy.
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            Nonperturbative Corrections to One Gluon Exchange Quark Potentials

            The leading nonperturbative QCD corrections to the one gluon exchange quark-quark, quark-antiquark and \(q \bar{q}\) pair-excitation potentials are derived by using a covariant form of nonlocal two-quark and two-gluon vacuum expectation values. Our numerical calculation indicates that the correction of quark and gluon condensates to the quark-antiquark potential improves the heavy quarkonium spectra to some degree.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              30 January 2007
              2007-03-26
              Article
              10.1088/1367-2630/9/1/017
              astro-ph/0701874
              4b888d08-b4f6-4b61-81f9-f6b104226b1e
              History
              Custom metadata
              New J.Phys.9:17,2007
              76 pages, 26 figures, review article to appear in the GRB Focus Issue of New Journal of Physics
              astro-ph

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