Electromagnetic Counterparts of Compact Object Mergers Powered by the Radioactive Decay of R-process Nuclei
B.D. Metzger, G. Martinez-Pinedo, S. Darbha, E. Quataert, A. Arcones,, D. Kasen, R. Thomas, P. Nugent, I.V. Panov, N.T. Zinner

TL;DR
This paper models optical transients from neutron star mergers powered by radioactive decay of r-process elements, predicting their brightness and evolution to aid electromagnetic follow-up of gravitational wave detections.
Contribution
It presents the first self-consistent calculations of optical transients from compact mergers using nuclear reaction networks and radiation transfer modeling.
Findings
Optical transients peak around 1 day with luminosities ~3e41 ergs/s.
Transient brightness is relatively insensitive to nuclear physics uncertainties.
EM counterparts are detectable with current optical surveys and can constrain heavy element origins.
Abstract
The most promising astrophysical sources of kHz gravitational waves (GWs) are the inspiral and merger of binary neutron star(NS)/black hole systems. Maximizing the scientific return of a GW detection will require identifying a coincident electro-magnetic (EM) counterpart. One of the most likely sources of isotropic EM emission from compact object mergers is a supernova-like transient powered by the radioactive decay of heavy elements synthesized in ejecta from the merger. We present the first calculations of the optical transients from compact object mergers that self-consistently determine the radioactive heating by means of a nuclear reaction network; using this heating rate, we model the light curve with a one dimensional Monte Carlo radiation transfer calculation. For an ejecta mass ~1e-2 M_sun[1e-3 M_sun] the resulting light curve peaks on a timescale ~ 1 day at a V-band luminosity…
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