The Electromagnetic Counterpart of the Binary Neutron Star Merger LIGO/VIRGO GW170817. III. Optical and UV Spectra of a Blue Kilonova From Fast Polar Ejecta
M. Nicholl, E. Berger, D. Kasen, B. D. Metzger, J. Elias, C. Briceno,, K. D. Alexander, P. K. Blanchard, R. Chornock, P. S. Cowperthwaite, T., Eftekhari, W. Fong, R. Margutti, V. A. Villar, P. K. G. Williams, W. Brown,, J. Annis, A. Bahramian, D. Brout, D. A. Brown, H.-Y. Chen

TL;DR
This study presents optical and UV spectra of the first electromagnetic counterpart to a gravitational wave source, GW170817, revealing a rapidly evolving blue kilonova from polar ejecta with implications for neutron star properties and r-process nucleosynthesis.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectral observations of GW170817's kilonova, identifying ejecta composition, velocity, and geometry, and constrains neutron star characteristics and nucleosynthesis contributions.
Findings
Blue ejecta mass ~0.03 solar masses
Ejecta velocity ~0.3c
Lanthanide fraction ~10^{-4}
Abstract
We present optical and ultraviolet spectra of the first electromagnetic counterpart to a gravitational wave (GW) source, the binary neutron star merger GW170817. Spectra were obtained nightly between 1.5 and 9.5 days post-merger, using the SOAR and Magellan telescopes; the UV spectrum was obtained with the \textit{Hubble Space Telescope} at 5.5 days. Our data reveal a rapidly-fading blue component ( K at 1.5 days) that quickly reddens; spectra later than days peak beyond the optical regime. The spectra are mostly featureless, although we identify a possible weak emission line at \AA\ at days. The colours, rapid evolution and featureless spectrum are consistent with a "blue" kilonova from polar ejecta comprised mainly of light -process nuclei with atomic mass number . This indicates a sight-line within $\theta_{\rm…
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