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Published January 6, 2011 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Black hole-neutron star mergers: Effects of the orientation of the black hole spin

Abstract

The spin of black holes in black hole-neutron star binaries can have a strong influence on the merger dynamics and the post-merger state; a wide variety of spin magnitudes and orientations are expected to occur in nature. In this paper, we report the first simulations in full general relativity of black hole-neutron star mergers with misaligned black hole spin. We vary the spin magnitude from a_(BH)/M_(BH) = 0 to a_(BH)/M_(BH) = 0.9 for aligned cases, and we vary the misalignment angle from 0 to 80° for a_(BH)/M_(BH) = 0.5. We restrict our study to 3:1 mass-ratio systems and use a simple Γ-law equation of state. We find that the misalignment angle has a strong effect on the mass of the post-merger accretion disk, but only for angles greater than ≈ 40°. Although the disk mass varies significantly with spin magnitude and misalignment angle, we find that all disks have very similar lifetimes ≈ 100  ms. Their thermal and rotational profiles are also very similar. For a misaligned merger, the disk is tilted with respect to the final black hole's spin axis. This will cause the disk to precess, but on a time scale longer than the accretion time. In all cases, we find promising setups for gamma-ray burst production: the disks are hot, thick, and hyperaccreting, and a baryon-clear region exists above the black hole.

Additional Information

© 2011 American Physical Society. Received 23 July 2010; published 6 January 2011. We thank Geoffrey Lovelace and Harald Pfeiffer for useful discussions and suggestions. This work was supported in part by a grant from the Sherman Fairchild Foundation, by NSF Grants Nos. PHY-0652952 and PHY-0652929, and NASA Grant No. NNX09AF96G. This research was supported in part by the NSF through TeraGrid [42] resources provided by NCSA's Ranger cluster under Grant No. TG-PHY990007N. Computations were also performed on the GPC supercomputer at the SciNet HPC Consortium. SciNet is funded by: the Canada Foundation for Innovation under the auspices of Compute Canada; the Government of Ontario; Ontario Research Fund—Research Excellence; and the University of Toronto.

Attached Files

Published - Foucart2011p12691Phys_Rev_D.pdf

Submitted - 1007.4203.pdf

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August 19, 2023
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