The electromagnetic counterparts of compact binary mergers
Ehud Nakar

TL;DR
This paper reviews the electromagnetic counterparts of neutron star and black hole mergers, emphasizing the insights gained from combined gravitational wave and electromagnetic observations, especially from GW170817, into astrophysics and fundamental physics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the theory, observations, and implications of multi-messenger signals from compact binary mergers, highlighting recent advances and future prospects.
Findings
GW170817 confirmed neutron star mergers produce detectable EM signals.
Multi-messenger observations constrain neutron star equations of state.
Insights into r-process nucleosynthesis and short gamma-ray bursts.
Abstract
Mergers of binaries consisting of two neutron stars, or a black hole and a neutron star, offer a unique opportunity to study a range of physical and astrophysical processes using two different and almost orthogonal probes - gravitational waves (GW) and electromagnetic (EM) emission. The GW signal probes the binary and the physical processes that take place during the last stages of the merger, while the EM emission provides clues to the material that is thrown out following the merger. The accurate localization, which only the EM emission can provide, also indicates the astrophysical setting in which the merger took place. In addition, the combination of the two signals provides constraints on the nature of gravity and on the expansion rate of the Universe. The first detection of a binary neutron star merger by the LIGO-Virgo collaboration, GW170817, initiated the era of multi-messenger…
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