Optical emission from a kilonova following a gravitational-wave-detected neutron-star merger
Iair Arcavi (1,2), Griffin Hosseinzadeh (1,2), D. Andrew Howell (1,2),, Curtis McCully (1,2), Dovi Poznanski (3), Daniel Kasen (4,5), Jennifer Barnes, (6), Michael Zaltzman (3), Sergiy Vasylyev (1,2), Dan Maoz (3), Stefano, Valenti (7) ((1) UC Santa Barbara

TL;DR
This paper reports the first optical and near-infrared observations of a kilonova associated with a neutron-star merger detected via gravitational waves, providing insights into the ejecta composition and transient behavior.
Contribution
It presents observational evidence of a kilonova linked to a gravitational-wave event, confirming theoretical models and characterizing the ejecta's properties and composition.
Findings
Detected a transient with initial blue excess and rapid reddening.
Observed ejecta mass of a few hundredths of a solar mass.
Data consistent with lanthanide-poor, low-opacity ejecta.
Abstract
The merger of two neutron stars has been predicted to produce an optical-infrared transient (lasting a few days) known as a 'kilonova', powered by the radioactive decay of neutron-rich species synthesized in the merger. Evidence that short gamma-ray bursts also arise from neutron-star mergers has been accumulating. In models of such mergers a small amount of mass (- solar masses) with a low electron fraction is ejected at high velocities (0.1-0.3 times light speed) and/or carried out by winds from an accretion disk formed around the newly merged object. This mass is expected to undergo rapid neutron capture (r-process) nucleosynthesis, leading to the formation of radioactive elements that release energy as they decay, powering an electromagnetic transient. A large uncertainty in the composition of the newly synthesized material leads to various expected colours,…
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