The Emergence of a Lanthanide-rich Kilonova Following the Merger of Two Neutron Stars

Open Access
Authors
  • N.R. Tanvir
  • A.J. Levan
  • C. González-Fernández
  • O. Korobkin
  • I. Mandel
  • S. Rosswog
  • J. Hjorth
  • P. D'Avanzo
  • A.S. Fruchter
  • C.L. Fryer
  • T. Kangas
  • B. Milvang-Jensen
  • S. Rosetti
  • D. Steeghs
  • R.T. Wollaeger
  • Z. Cano
  • C.M. Copperwheat
  • S. Covino
  • V. D'Elia
  • A. de Ugarte Postigo
  • P.A. Evans
  • W.P. Even
  • S. Fairhurst
  • R. Figuera Jaimes
  • C.J. Fontes
  • Y.I. Fujii
  • J.P.U. Fynbo
  • B.P. Gompertz
  • J. Greiner
  • G. Hodosan
  • M.J. Irwin
  • P. Jakobsson
  • U.G. Jørgensen
  • D.A. Kann
  • J.D. Lyman
  • D. Malesani
  • R.G. McMahon
  • A. Melandri
  • P.T. O'Brien
  • J.P. Osborne
  • E. Palazzi
  • D.A. Perley
  • E. Pian
  • S. Piranomonte
  • M. Rabus
  • E. Rol
  • A. Rowlinson ORCID logo
  • S. Schulze
  • P. Sutton
  • C.C. Thöne
  • K. Ulaczyk
  • D. Watson
  • K. Wiersema
  • R.A.M.J. Wijers
Publication date 20-10-2017
Journal Astrophysical Journal Letters
Article number L27
Volume | Issue number 848 | 2
Number of pages 9
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We report the discovery and monitoring of the near-infrared counterpart (AT2017gfo) of a binary neutron-star merger event detected as a gravitational wave source by Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO)/Virgo (GW170817) and as a short gamma-ray burst by Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) and Integral SPI-ACS (GRB 170817A). The evolution of the transient light is consistent with predictions for the behavior of a "kilonova/macronova" powered by the radioactive decay of massive neutron-rich nuclides created via r-process nucleosynthesis in the neutron-star ejecta. In particular, evidence for this scenario is found from broad features seen in Hubble Space Telescope infrared spectroscopy, similar to those predicted for lanthanide-dominated ejecta, and the much slower evolution in the near-infrared Ks-band compared to the optical. This indicates that the late-time light is dominated by high-opacity lanthanide-rich ejecta, suggesting nucleosynthesis to the third r-process peak (atomic masses A ≈ 195). This discovery confirms that neutron-star mergers produce kilo-/macronovae and that they are at least a major—if not the dominant—site of rapid neutron capture nucleosynthesis in the universe.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/aa90b6
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017ApJ...848L..27T
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