Mass Ejection from the Remnant of a Binary Neutron Star Merger: Viscous-Radiation Hydrodynamics Study
Sho Fujibayashi, Kenta Kiuchi, Nobuya Nishimura, Yuichiro Sekiguchi,, and Masaru Shibata

TL;DR
This study uses general relativistic neutrino radiation hydrodynamics simulations to explore how viscosity influences mass ejection from a neutron star remnant after a binary neutron star merger, revealing significant ejecta with high electron fraction and potential bright electromagnetic signals.
Contribution
It presents the first long-term axisymmetric simulation of viscosity effects on mass ejection from a post-merger neutron star remnant, highlighting the role of viscosity in ejecta mass and composition.
Findings
Viscosity induces shock waves leading to mass ejection of ~0.01-0.02 solar masses.
Ejecta are lanthanide-poor with high electron fraction, affecting opacity.
Viscosity-driven ejecta could dominate dynamical ejecta in total mass.
Abstract
We perform long-term general relativistic neutrino radiation hydrodynamics simulations (in axisymmetry) for a massive neutron star (MNS) surrounded by a torus, which is a canonical remnant formed after the binary neutron star merger. We take into account the effects of viscosity, which is likely to arise in the merger remnant due to magnetohydrodynamical turbulence. As the initial condition, we employ the azimuthally averaged data of the MNS-torus system derived in a three-dimensional, numerical-relativity simulation for the binary neutron star merger. The viscous effect plays key roles for the remnant evolution and mass ejection from it in two phases of the evolution. In the first ms, a differential rotation state of the MNS is changed to a rigidly rotating state, and as a result, a sound wave, which subsequently becomes a shock wave, is formed in the vicinity of the MNS…
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