The Electromagnetic Counterpart of the Binary Neutron Star Merger LIGO/VIRGO GW170817. II. UV, Optical, and Near-IR Light Curves and Comparison to Kilonova Models
P. S. Cowperthwaite, E. Berger, V. A. Villar, B. D. Metzger, M., Nicholl, R. Chornock, P. K. Blanchard, W. Fong, R. Margutti, M., Soares-Santos, K. D. Alexander, S. Allam, J. Annis, D. Brout, D. A. Brown, R., E. Butler, H.-Y. Chen, H. T. Diehl, Z. Doctor, M. R. Drout

TL;DR
This paper presents detailed UV, optical, and NIR observations of the first electromagnetic counterpart to a gravitational wave event from a binary neutron star merger, analyzing its light curves and comparing them to kilonova models.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive multi-wavelength light curves of GW170817's kilonova and demonstrates that a two-component ejecta model best explains the observations, supporting BNS mergers as a major r-process element source.
Findings
Multi-component ejecta model fits the data well.
Blue ejecta: ~0.01 M_sun, 0.3c velocity.
Red ejecta: ~0.04 M_sun, 0.1c velocity.
Abstract
We present UV, optical, and NIR photometry of the first electromagnetic counterpart to a gravitational wave source from Advanced LIGO/Virgo, the binary neutron star merger GW170817. Our data set extends from the discovery of the optical counterpart at days to days post-merger, and includes observations with the Dark Energy Camera (DECam), Gemini-South/FLAMINGOS-2 (GS/F2), and the {\it Hubble Space Telescope} ({\it HST}). The spectral energy distribution (SED) inferred from this photometry at days is well described by a blackbody model with K, a radius of cm (corresponding to an expansion velocity of ), and a bolometric luminosity of erg s. At days we find a multi-component SED across the optical and NIR, and subsequently we observe rapid fading in the UV and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
