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Published August 11, 2016 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Dynamical Mass Ejection from Binary Neutron Star Mergers

Abstract

We present fully general-relativistic simulations of binary neutron star mergers with a temperature and composition dependent nuclear equation of state. We study the dynamical mass ejection from both quasi-circular and dynamical-capture eccentric mergers. We systematically vary the level of our treatment of the microphysics to isolate the effects of neutrino cooling and heating and we compute the nucleosynthetic yields of the ejecta. We find that eccentric binaries can eject significantly more material than quasi-circular binaries and generate bright infrared and radio emission. In all our simulations the outflow is composed of a combination of tidally- and shock-driven ejecta, mostly distributed over a broad ∼60∘ angle from the orbital plane, and, to a lesser extent, by thermally driven winds at high latitudes. Ejecta from eccentric mergers are typically more neutron rich than those of quasi-circular mergers. We find neutrino cooling and heating to affect, quantitatively and qualitatively, composition, morphology, and total mass of the outflows. This is also reflected in the infrared and radio signatures of the binary. The final nucleosynthetic yields of the ejecta are robust and insensitive to input physics or merger type in the regions of the second and third r-process peaks. The yields for elements on the first peak vary between our simulations, but none of our models is able to explain the Solar abundances of first-peak elements without invoking additional first-peak contributions from either neutrino and viscously-driven winds operating on longer timescales after the mergers, or from core-collapse supernovae.

Additional Information

© 2016 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. Accepted 2016 May 18. Received 2016 May 18. In original form 2016 January 11. First published online May 23, 2016. We thank S. Bernuzzi, S. Richers, and S. Rosswog for useful discussions, and the anonymous referee for comments that have improved the paper. This research was partially supported by the Sherman Fairchild Foundation, by NSF under award nos. CAREER PHY-1151197, PHY-1404569, and AST-1333520, and by 'NewCompStar', COST Action MP1304. FG is supported by the Helmholtz International Center for FAIR within the framework of the LOEWE programme launched by the State of Hesse. Support for LFR during this work was provided by NASA through an Einstein Postdoctoral Fellowship grant numbered PF3-140114 awarded by the Chandra X-ray Center, which is operated by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory for NASA under contract NAS8-03060. The simulations were performed on the Caltech compute cluster Zwicky (NSF MRI-R2 award no. PHY-0960291), on SuperMUC at the LRZ in Garching, on the NSF XSEDE network under allocation TG-PHY100033, on LOEWE in Frankfurt, and on NSF/NCSA BlueWaters under NSF PRAC award no. ACI-1440083.

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Published - MNRASRadice,detal.pdf

Submitted - 1601.02426v2.pdf

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August 20, 2023
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October 20, 2023