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      Dynamical ejecta and nucleosynthetic yields from eccentric binary neutron-star mergers

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          Abstract

          With the recent advent of multi-messenger gravitational-wave astronomy and in anticipation of more sensitive, next-generation gravitational-wave detectors, we investigate the dynamics, gravitational-wave emission, and nucleosynthetic yields of numerous eccentric binary neutron-star mergers having different equations of state. For each equation of state we vary the orbital properties around the threshold of immediate merger, as well as the binary mass ratio. In addition to a study of the gravitational-wave emission including \(f\)-mode oscillations before and after merger, we couple the dynamical ejecta output from the simulations to the nuclear-reaction network code SkyNet to compute nucleosynthetic yields and compare to the corresponding results in the case of a quasi-circular merger. We find that the amount and velocity of dynamically ejected material is always much larger than in the quasi-circular case, reaching extreme values of \(M_{\rm ej} \sim 0.1 \, M_{\odot}\) and \(v_{\rm ej}/c \sim 0.75\). At the same time, the properties of this material are rather insensitive to the details of the orbit, such as pericenter distance or post-encounter apoastron distance. Furthermore, while the composition of the ejected matter depends considerably on the equation of state, the nucleosynthetic yields do not, thus indicating that kilonova signatures could provide information on the orbital properties of dynamically captured neutron-star binaries.

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          Most cited references7

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          Nucleosynthesis, neutrino bursts and γ-rays from coalescing neutron stars

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            Shapiro delay measurement of a two solar mass neutron star

            Neutron stars are composed of the densest form of matter known to exist in our universe, and thus provide a unique laboratory for exploring the properties of cold matter at super-nuclear density. Measurements of the masses or radii of these objects can strongly constrain the neutron-star matter equation of state, and consequently the interior composition of neutron stars. Neutron stars that are visible as millisecond radio pulsars are especially useful in this respect, as timing observations of the radio pulses provide an extremely precise probe of both the pulsar's motion and the surrounding space-time metric. In particular, for a pulsar in a binary system, detection of the general relativistic Shapiro delay allows us to infer the masses of both the neutron star and its binary companion to high precision. Here we present radio timing observations of the binary millisecond pulsar PSR J1614-2230, which show a strong Shapiro delay signature. The implied pulsar mass of 1.97 +/- 0.04 M_sun is by far the highest yet measured with such certainty, and effectively rules out the presence of hyperons, bosons, or free quarks at densities comparable to the nuclear saturation density.
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              GW170817, general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations, and the neutron star maximum mass

              Recent numerical simulations in general relativistic magnetohydrodynamics (GRMHD) provide useful constraints for the interpretation of the GW170817 discovery. Combining the observed data with these simulations leads to a bound on the maximum mass of a cold, spherical neutron star (the TOV limit): M max sph ≲ 2.74 / β , where β is the ratio of the maximum mass of a uniformly rotating neutron star (the supramassive limit) over the maximum mass of a nonrotating star. Causality arguments allow β to be as high as 1.27, while most realistic candidate equations of state predict β to be closer to 1.2, yielding M max sph in the range 2.16–2.28 M ⊙ . A minimal set of assumptions based on these simulations distinguishes this analysis from previous ones, but leads a to similar estimate. There are caveats, however, and they are enumerated and discussed. The caveats can be removed by further simulations and analysis to firm up the basic argument.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                10 July 2018
                Article
                1807.03795
                22d72592-ea65-4ada-b3b1-5541d8411152

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                24 pages, 14 figures, submitted to PRD
                gr-qc astro-ph.HE

                General relativity & Quantum cosmology,High energy astrophysical phenomena

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