Kilonova Light Curves from the Disk Wind Outflows of Compact Object Mergers
Daniel Kasen, Rodrigo Fernandez, Brian Metzger

TL;DR
This study models kilonova light curves from accretion disk winds after compact object mergers, revealing how their brightness, color, and spectra depend on merger physics and composition, aiding electromagnetic counterpart detection.
Contribution
It provides detailed radiative transfer simulations of disk wind kilonovae, highlighting the dual-component light curves and spectral features that distinguish them from dynamical ejecta.
Findings
Two distinct kilonova components: blue optical and infrared.
Neutrino irradiation influences lanthanide production and brightness.
Spectral line features can diagnose ejecta composition.
Abstract
We study the radioactively-powered transients produced by accretion disk winds following a compact object merger. Starting with the outflows generated in two-dimensional hydrodynamical disk models, we use wavelength-dependent radiative transfer calculations to generate synthetic light curves and spectra. We show that the brightness and color of the resulting kilonova transients carry information about the merger physics. In the regions of the wind where neutrino irradiation raises the electron fraction to Ye > 0.25, r-process nucleosynthesis halts before producing high-opacity, complex ions (the lanthanides). The kilonova light curves thus show two distinct components: a brief (~2 day) blue optical transient produced in the outer lanthanide-free ejecta, and a longer (~10 day) infrared transient produced in the inner, lanthanide line-blanketed region. Mergers producing a longer-lived…
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