# Radio afterglows of binary neutron star mergers: a population study for   current and future gravitational wave observing runs

**Authors:** Rapha\"el Duque, Fr\'ed\'eric Daigne, Robert Mochkovitch

arXiv: 1905.04495 · 2019-10-23

## TL;DR

This study models the population of radio afterglows from binary neutron star mergers to predict their detectability in current and future gravitational wave observing runs, aiding in understanding these cosmic events.

## Contribution

It combines analytical models with population data to forecast radio afterglow distributions and detection prospects for upcoming gravitational wave campaigns.

## Key findings

- One third of GW-detected mergers in O3 could have detectable radio afterglows with VLA.
- Radio afterglows can provide insights into neutron star merger populations and outflows.
- Detection likelihood depends on merger orientation and detector sensitivities.

## Abstract

Following the historical observations of GW170817 and its multi-wavelength afterglow, more radio afterglows from neutron star mergers are expected in the future as counterparts to gravitational wave inspiral signals. We wish to describe these events using our current knowledge of the population of neutron star mergers coming from gamma-ray burst science, and taking into account the sensitivities of current and future gravitational wave and radio detectors. We combine analytical models for the merger gravitational wave and radio afterglow signals to a population model prescribing the energetics, circum-merger density and other relevant parameters of the mergers. We report the expected distributions of observables (distance, orientation, afterglow peak time/flux, etc.) from future events and study how these can be used to further probe the population of binary neutron stars, their mergers and related outflows during future observing campaigns. In the case of the O3 run of the LIGO-Virgo Collaboration, the radio afterglow of one third of gravitational-wave-detected mergers should be detectable (and detected if the source is localized thanks to the kilonova counterpart) by the Very Large Array, and these events should have viewing angles similar to that of GW170817. These findings confirm the radio afterglow as a powerful insight on these events, though some key afterglow-related techniques, such as very long baseline interferometry imaging of the merger remnant, may no longer be feasible as the gravitational wave horizon increases.

## Full text

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## Figures

11 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.04495/full.md

## References

80 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.04495/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.04495