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The Electromagnetic Counterpart of the Binary Neutron Star Merger LIGO/VIRGO GW170817. IV. Detection of Near-infrared Signatures of r-process Nucleosynthesis with Gemini-South

Authors :
Chornock, R.
Berger, E.
Kasen, D.
Cowperthwaite, P. S.
Nicholl, M.
Villar, V. A.
Alexander, K. D.
Blanchard, P. K.
Eftekhari, T.
Fong, W.
Margutti, R.
Williams, P. K. G.
Annis, J.
Brout, D.
Brown, D. A.
Chen, H. -Y.
Drout, M. R.
Foley, R. J.
Frieman, J. A.
Fryer, C. L.
Holz, D. E.
Matheson, T.
Metzger, B. D.
Quataert, E.
Rest, A.
Sako, M.
Scolnic, D. M.
Smith, N.
Soares-Santos, M.
Chornock, R.
Berger, E.
Kasen, D.
Cowperthwaite, P. S.
Nicholl, M.
Villar, V. A.
Alexander, K. D.
Blanchard, P. K.
Eftekhari, T.
Fong, W.
Margutti, R.
Williams, P. K. G.
Annis, J.
Brout, D.
Brown, D. A.
Chen, H. -Y.
Drout, M. R.
Foley, R. J.
Frieman, J. A.
Fryer, C. L.
Holz, D. E.
Matheson, T.
Metzger, B. D.
Quataert, E.
Rest, A.
Sako, M.
Scolnic, D. M.
Smith, N.
Soares-Santos, M.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

We present a near-infrared spectral sequence of the electromagnetic counterpart to the binary neutron star merger GW170817 detected by Advanced LIGO/Virgo. Our dataset comprises seven epochs of J+H spectra taken with FLAMINGOS-2 on Gemini-South between 1.5 and 10.5 days after the merger. In the initial epoch, the spectrum is dominated by a smooth blue continuum due to a high-velocity, lanthanide-poor blue kilonova component. Starting the following night, all subsequent spectra instead show features that are similar to those predicted in model spectra of material with a high concentration of lanthanides, including spectral peaks near 1.07 and 1.55 microns. Our fiducial model with 0.04 M_sun of ejecta, an ejection velocity of v=0.1c, and a lanthanide concentration of X_lan=1e-2 provides a good match to the spectra taken in the first five days, although it over-predicts the late-time fluxes. We also explore models with multiple fitting components, in each case finding that a significant abundance of lanthanide elements is necessary to match the broad spectral peaks that we observe starting at 2.5 d after the merger. These data provide direct evidence that binary neutron star mergers are significant production sites of even the heaviest r-process elements.<br />Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, ApJL, in press

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1098124795
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847.2041-8213.aa905c