The first direct double neutron star merger detection: implications for cosmic nucleosynthesis
S. Rosswog, J. Sollerman, U. Feindt, A. Goobar, O. Korobkin, C., Fremling, M. Kasliwal

TL;DR
The paper discusses the first direct detection of a double neutron star merger through gravitational and electromagnetic signals, providing strong evidence that such mergers are a primary source of heavy elements via the r-process in the universe.
Contribution
It presents observational analysis confirming neutron star mergers as a major site of cosmic nucleosynthesis, with implications for understanding heavy element formation.
Findings
Bolometric lightcurve consistent with neutron-rich ejecta decay
NIR lightcurves fit with or without lanthanide-rich ejecta
NSMs can produce all estimated Galactic r-process material
Abstract
The astrophysical r-process site where about half of the elements heavier than iron are produced has been a puzzle for several decades. Here we discuss the role of neutron star mergers (NSMs) in the light of the first direct detection of such an event in both gravitational (GW) and electromagnetic (EM) waves. We analyse bolometric and NIR lightcurves of the first detected double neutron star merger and compare them to nuclear reaction network-based macronova models. The slope of the bolometric lightcurve is consistent with the radioactive decay of neutron star ejecta with (but not larger), which provides strong evidence for an r-process origin of the electromagnetic emission. This rules out in particular "nickel winds" as major source of the emission. We find that the NIR lightcurves can be well fitted either with or without lanthanide-rich ejecta. Our limits on the…
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