Diversity of early kilonova with the realistic opacities of highly ionized heavy elements
Smaranika Banerjee, Masaomi Tanaka, Daiji Kato, Gediminas Gaigalas

TL;DR
This study derives realistic atomic opacities for elements from La to Ra in high ionization states to model early kilonova emissions, revealing how composition affects luminosity and observability in UV and optical bands.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive opacity dataset for all elements from La to Ra in high ionization states, enabling more accurate modeling of early kilonova light curves and spectra.
Findings
Lanthanide-rich ejecta are fainter and have distinct signatures.
Early brightness peaks at 0.1 days are detectable in UV and optical bands.
Gray opacities of 1-20 cm2/g can approximate detailed models.
Abstract
We investigate the early (t < 1 day) kilonova from the neutron star merger by deriving atomic opacities for all the elements from La to Ra (Z = 57 - 88) ionized to the states V - XI. The opacities at high temperatures for the elements with open f-shells (e.g., lanthanides) are exceptionally high, reaching kappa_{exp} ~ 10^4 cm2/g at lambda < 1000 A at T ~ 70,000 K, whereas, the opacities at the same temperature and wavelengths for the elements with the open d-, p-, and s-shells reach kappa_{exp} ~ 1 cm2/g, 0.1 cm2/g, and 0.01 cm2/g, respectively. Using the new opacity dataset, we derive the early kilonovae for various compositions and density structures expected for neutron star merger ejecta. The bolometric luminosity for the lanthanide-rich ejecta shows distinct signatures and is fainter than that for the lanthanide-free ejecta. The early luminosity is suppressed by the presence of a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
