Abstract
Jets in long-duration γ-ray bursts (GRBs) have to drill through the collapsing star in order to break out of it and produce the γ-ray signal while the central engine is still active. If the breakout time is shorter for more powerful engines, then the jet-collapsar interaction acts as a filter of less luminous jets. We show that the observed broken power-law GRB luminosity function is a natural outcome of this process. For a theoretically motivated breakout time that scales with jet luminosity as L-χ with χ ~ 1/3-1/2, we show that the shape of the γ -ray duration distribution can be uniquely determined by the GRB luminosity function and matches the observed one. This analysis has also interesting implications about the supernova-central engine connection. We show that not only successful jets can deposit sufficient energy in the stellar envelope to power the GRB-associated supernovae, but also failed jets may operate in all Type Ib/c supernovae.
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CITATION STYLE
Petropoulou, M., Duran, R. B., & Giannios, D. (2017). Collapsar γ -ray bursts: How the luminosity function dictates the duration distribution. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 472(3), 2722–2727. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stx2151
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