Radioactive $\gamma$-Ray Emissions from Neutron Star Mergers
Li-Xin Li

TL;DR
This paper models the radioactive gamma-ray emissions from neutron star mergers, predicting their brightness, spectrum, and detectability, especially around one day post-merger, with implications for future gamma-ray observations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed theoretical analysis of gamma-ray emissions from neutron star mergers, including spectral features and observability, which was not comprehensively addressed before.
Findings
Gamma-ray emission peaks around 1.2 days post-merger.
More than 95% of gamma-ray energy is in 0.2-4 MeV photons.
Detectability by Satellite-ETCC up to 12 Mpc.
Abstract
Gravitational waves and electromagnetic radiations from a neutron star merger were discovered on 17 August 2017. Multiband observations of the optical transient have identified brightness and spectrum features broadly consistent with theoretical predictions. According to the theoretical model, the optical radiation from a neutron star merger originates from the radioactive decay of unstable nuclides freshly synthesized in the merger ejecta. In about a day the ejecta transits from an optically thick state to an optically thin state due to its subrelativistic expansion. Hence, we expect that about a day after the merger, the gamma-ray photons produced by radioactive decays start to escape from the ejecta and make it bright in the MeV band. In this paper, we study the features of the radioactive gamma-ray emission from a neutron star merger, including the brightness and the spectrum, and…
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