Abstract

Long-term viscous neutrino-radiation hydrodynamics simulations in full general relativity are performed for a massive disk surrounding spinning stellar-mass black holes with mass $M_{\rm BH}=4$, $6$, and $10M_\odot$ and initial dimensionless spin $\chi \approx 0.8$. The initial disk is chosen to have mass $M_{\rm disk}\approx 0.1$ or $3M_\odot$ as plausible models of the remnants for the merger of black hole-neutron star binaries or the stellar core collapse from a rapidly rotating progenitor, respectively. For $M_{\rm disk} \approx 0.1M_\odot$ with the outer disk edge initially located at $r_{\rm out} \sim 200$ km, we find that $15$%-$20$% of $M_{\rm disk}$ is ejected and the average electron fraction of the ejecta is $\langle Y_e \rangle = 0.30$-$0.35$ as found in the previous study. For $M_{\rm disk} \approx 3M_\odot$, we find that $\approx 10$%-$20$% of $M_{\rm disk}$ is ejected for $r_{\rm out}\approx 200$-$1000$ km. In addition, $\langle Y_e \rangle$ of the ejecta can be enhanced to be $\gtrsim 0.4$ because the electron fraction is increased significantly during the long-term viscous expansion of the disk with high neutrino luminosity until the mass ejection sets in. Our results suggest that not heavy $r$-process elements but light trans-iron elements would be synthesized in the matter ejected from a massive torus surrounding stellar-mass black holes. We also find that the outcomes of the viscous evolution for the high-mass disk case is composed of a rapidly spinning black hole surrounded by a torus with a narrow funnel, which appears to be suitable for generating gamma-ray bursts.

Highlights

  • IntroductionA stellar-mass spinning black hole surrounded by a massive disk is believed to be a frequent remnant for the merger of neutron star binaries (binary neutron stars and black hole–neutron star binaries) and for the stellar core collapse of massive and rapidly rotating progenitors

  • A stellar-mass spinning black hole surrounded by a massive disk is believed to be a frequent remnant for the merger of neutron star binaries and for the stellar core collapse of massive and rapidly rotating progenitors

  • For Mdisk ≈ 0.1 M⊙ with the outer disk edge initially located at rout ∼ 200 km, we find that 15%–20% of Mdisk is ejected and the average electron fraction of the ejecta is hYei 1⁄4 0.30–0.35 as found in the previous study

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Summary

Introduction

A stellar-mass spinning black hole surrounded by a massive disk is believed to be a frequent remnant for the merger of neutron star binaries (binary neutron stars and black hole–neutron star binaries) and for the stellar core collapse of massive and rapidly rotating progenitors. Such remnants have been speculated to be the central engines of gamma-ray bursts [1,2,3,4] and kilonovae [5,6,7,8]. The purpose of this study is to explore the quantitative dependence of the viscous evolution of disks and subsequent mass

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