Radioactively-Powered Gamma-Ray Transient Associated with a Kilonova from Neutron Star Merger
Meng-Hua Chen, Rui-Chong Hu, En-Wei Liang

TL;DR
This paper models the gamma-ray transient from neutron star merger ejecta, predicting its lightcurve and spectrum, and assesses the detectability with current and future gamma-ray missions, highlighting observational challenges.
Contribution
It provides detailed calculations of the gamma-ray transient's lightcurve and spectrum based on ejecta properties, and evaluates detection prospects with existing and upcoming instruments.
Findings
Peak time depends on ejecta mass and velocity.
Most photons are in the 100-3000 keV range.
Detection of GRTs is unlikely with current technology.
Abstract
AAssociation of GW170817/GRB170817A/AT2017gfo provides the first direct evidence for neutron star mergers as significant sources of -process nucleosynthesis. A gamma-ray transient (GRT) would be powered by the radioactive decay of the freshly-synthesized -process elements. By analyzing the composition and gamma-ray opacity of the kilonova ejecta in details, we calculate the lightcurve and spectrum of the GRT for a range of spherically symmetric merger ejecta models with mass and expansion velocity . It is found that the peak of the GRT lightcurve depends on and as and . Most radiating photons are…
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