Multi-messenger Observations of a Binary Neutron Star Merger
LIGO Scientific Collaboration, Virgo Collaboration, Fermi GBM,, INTEGRAL, IceCube Collaboration, AstroSat Cadmium Zinc Telluride Imager Team,, IPN Collaboration, The Insight-Hxmt Collaboration, ANTARES Collaboration, The, Swift Collaboration, AGILE Team, The 1M2H Team

TL;DR
This paper reports the first multi-messenger observation of a binary neutron star merger, combining gravitational waves, gamma-ray burst, and electromagnetic signals across the spectrum, confirming neutron star mergers as sources of heavy elements and gravitational waves.
Contribution
It presents the first coordinated detection of gravitational waves and electromagnetic signals from a neutron star merger, demonstrating multi-messenger astronomy capabilities.
Findings
Confirmed neutron star merger as gravitational wave source
Detected electromagnetic counterparts across spectrum within hours
Provided insights into kilonova emission and jet formation
Abstract
On 2017 August 17 a binary neutron star coalescence candidate (later designated GW170817) with merger time 12:41:04 UTC was observed through gravitational waves by the Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo detectors. The Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor independently detected a gamma-ray burst (GRB 170817A) with a time delay of 1.7 s with respect to the merger time. From the gravitational-wave signal, the source was initially localized to a sky region of 31 deg at a luminosity distance of Mpc and with component masses consistent with neutron stars. The component masses were later measured to be in the range 0.86 to 2.26 Msun. An extensive observing campaign was launched across the electromagnetic spectrum leading to the discovery of a bright optical transient (SSS17a, now with the IAU identification of AT 2017gfo) in NGC 4993 (at 40 Mpc) less than 11 hours after…
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