Low-Mass X-Ray Binaries and Gamma-Ray Bursts
Abstract
More than twenty years after their discovery, the nature of gamma-ray burst sources (GRBs) remains mysterious. The results from BATSE experiment aboard the Compton Observatory show however that most of the sources of gamma-ray bursts cannot be distributed in the galactic disc. The possibility that a small fraction of sites of gamma-ray bursts is of galactic disc origin cannot however be excluded. We point out that large numbers of neutron-star binaries with orbital periods of 10 hr and M dwarf companions of mass 0.2-0.3 solar mass are a natural result of the evolution of low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs). The numbers and physical properties of these systems suggest that some gamma-ray burst sources may be identified with this endpoint of LMXB evolution. We suggest an observational test of this hypothesis.
- Publication:
-
American Institute of Physics Conference Series
- Pub Date:
- 1992
- Bibcode:
- 1992AIPC..265..126L
- Keywords:
-
- Dwarf Stars;
- Gamma Ray Bursts;
- Gamma Ray Observatory;
- M Stars;
- Neutron Stars;
- X Ray Binaries;
- Milky Way Galaxy;
- Spaceborne Astronomy;
- Stellar Evolution;
- Stellar Mass;
- Astrophysics