Published May 10, 2025 | Published
Journal Article Open

On the Impact of Neutrinos on the Launching of Relativistic Jets from "Magnetars" Produced in Neutron Star Mergers

  • 1. ROR icon Goethe University Frankfurt
  • 2. ROR icon Trinity College Dublin
  • 3. ROR icon Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies
  • 4. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

A significant interest has emerged recently in assessing whether collimated and ultrarelativistic outflows can be produced by a long-lived remnant from a binary neutron star (BNS) merger, with different approaches leading to different outcomes. To clarify some of the aspect of this process, we report the results of long-term (i.e., ∼110 ms) state-of-the-art general relativistic magnetohydrodynamics simulations of the inspiral and merger of a BNS system of magnetized stars. We find that after ∼50 ms from the merger an α–Ω dynamo driven by the magnetorotational instability sets in in the densest regions of the disk and leads to the breakout of the magnetic field lines from the accretion disk around the remnant. The breakout is responsible for generating a collimated, magnetically driven outflow with only mildly relativistic velocities and for a violent eruption of electromagnetic energy. We provide evidence that this outflow is partly collimated via a Blandford–Payne mechanism. Finally, by including or not the radiative transport via neutrinos, we determine the role they play in the launching of the collimated wind. In this way, we conclude that the mechanism of magnetic field breakout we observe is robust and takes place even without neutrinos. Contrary to previous expectations, the inclusion of neutrino absorption and emission leads to a smaller baryon pollution in polar regions and hence accelerates the occurrence of the breakout, yielding a larger electromagnetic luminosity. Given the mildly relativistic nature of these disk-driven breakout outflows, it is difficult to consider them responsible for the jet phenomenology observed in short gamma-ray bursts.

Copyright and License

© 2025. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.

Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.

Acknowledgement

The authors acknowledge insightful discussions with L. Combi, O. Gottlieb, K. Kiuchi, B. Metzger, P. Mösta, D. Siegel, and A. Tchekhovskoy. Partial funding comes from the State of Hesse within the Research Cluster ELEMENTS (Project ID 500/10.006), by the ERC Advanced Grant "JETSET: Launching, propagation and emission of relativistic jets from binary mergers and across mass scales" (grant No. 884631). L.R. acknowledges the Walter Greiner Gesellschaft zur Förderung der physikalischen Grundlagenforschung e.V. through the Carl W. Fueck Laureatus Chair. E.R.M. is supported by the National Science Foundation under grant No. PHY-2309210. The calculations were performed in part on the local ITP Supercomputing Clusters Iboga and Calea and in part on HPE Apollo HAWK at the High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS) under the grants BNSMIC and BBHDISKS.

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Additional details

Created:
May 13, 2025
Modified:
May 13, 2025