Detectability of compact binary merger macronovae
S. Rosswog, U. Feindt, O. Korobkin, M.-R. Wu, J. Sollerman, A. Goobar,, G. Martinez-Pinedo

TL;DR
This paper investigates the brightness and detectability of macronovae resulting from neutron star mergers, emphasizing how nuclear physics models influence their observability and comparing predictions with observed transients.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how nuclear reaction network choices affect macronova brightness predictions and compares model results with actual observed transients.
Findings
Alpha-decaying trans-lead nuclei significantly influence macronova brightness.
DZ31 nuclear mass model predicts brighter macronovae than FRDM.
Dynamic ejecta can produce K-band magnitudes exceeding -15.
Abstract
We study the optical and near-infrared luminosities and detectability of radioactively powered electromagnetic transients ('macronovae') occuring in the aftermath of binary neutron star and neutron star black hole mergers. We explore the transients that result from the dynamic ejecta and those from different types of wind outflows. Based on full nuclear network simulations we calculate the resulting light curves in different wavelength bands. We scrutinize the robustness of the results by comparing a) two different nuclear reaction networks and b) two macronova models. We explore in particular how sensitive the results are to the production of alpha-decaying trans-lead nuclei. We compare two frequently used mass models: the Finite-Range Droplet Model (FRDM) and the nuclear mass model of Duflo and Zuker (DZ31). We find that the abundance of alpha-decaying trans-lead nuclei has a…
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