The inner engine of GeV-radiation-emitting gamma-ray bursts
Abstract
We motivate how the most recent progress in the understanding the nature of the GeV radiation in most energetic gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), the binary-driven hypernovae (BdHNe), has led to the solution of a forty years unsolved problem in relativistic astrophysics: how to extract the rotational energy from a Kerr black hole for powering synchrotron emission and ultra high-energy cosmic rays. The "inner engine" is identified in the proper use of a classical solution introduced by Wald in 1974 duly extended to the most extreme conditions found around the newborn black hole in a BdHN. The energy extraction process occurs in a sequence impulsive processes each accelerating protons to 1021 eV in a timescale of 10-6 s and in presence of an external magnetic field of 1014 G. Specific example is given for a black hole of initial angular momentum J=0.3\,M2 and mass M≈ 3\,M leading to the GeV radiation of 1049 erg·s-1. The process can energetically continue for thousands of years.
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