Black Hole-Neutron Star Binaries near Neutron Star Disruption Limit in the Mass Regime of Event GW230529
Tia Martineau, Francois Foucart, Mark Scheel, Matthew Duez, Lawrence, Kidder, Harald Pfeiffer

TL;DR
This paper investigates black hole-neutron star mergers near the neutron star disruption threshold, revealing that even below predicted disruption limits, small accretion disks can form, impacting electromagnetic counterpart predictions.
Contribution
The study uses numerical simulations to explore BHNS mergers near the disruption limit, showing disks form below the predicted threshold and assessing the accuracy of existing remnant mass models.
Findings
Non-zero accretion disks form below the disruption threshold.
Remnant mass model underpredicts disk mass for DD2 EOS.
Kilonova signals would be dim, dominated by disk outflows.
Abstract
In May 2023, the LIGO Livingston observatory detected the likely black hole-neutron star (BHNS) merger GW230529_181500. That event is expected to be the merger of a 2.5-4.5 primary with a secondary compact object of mass between 1.2-2.0 . This makes it the first BHNS merger with a significant potential for the production of electromagnetic (EM) counterparts, and provides further evidence for compact objects existing within the suspected lower mass gap. To produce post-merger EM transients, the component of the black hole spin aligned with the orbital angular momentum must be sufficiently high, allowing the neutron star to be tidally disrupted. The disrupting BHNS binary may then eject a few percent of a solar mass of matter, leading to an observable kilonova driven by radioactive decays in ejecta, and/or a compact-binary GRB (cbGRB) resulting from the formation of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStatistical and numerical algorithms · Earthquake Detection and Analysis · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
