We present a comprehensive nucleosynthesis study of the neutrino-driven wind in the aftermath of a binary neutron star merger. Our focus is the initial remnant phase when a massive central neutron star is present. Using tracers from a recent hydrodynamical simulation, we determine total masses and integrated abundances to characterize the composition of unbound matter. We find that the nucleosynthetic yields depend sensitively on both the life time of the massive neutron star and the polar angle. Matter in excess of up to 9 · 10 −3 M becomes unbound until ∼ 200 ms. Due to electron fractions of Y e ≈ 0.2 − 0.4 mainly nuclei with mass numbers A < 130 are synthesized, complementing the yields from the earlier dynamic ejecta. Mixing scenarios with these two types of ejecta can explain the abundance pattern in r-process enriched metal-poor stars. Additionally, we calculate heating rates for the decay of the freshly produced radioactive isotopes. The resulting light curve peaks in the blue band after about 4 h. Furthermore, high opacities due to heavy r-process nuclei in the dynamic ejecta lead to a second peak in the infrared after 3 − 4 d.
When binary systems of neutron stars merge, a very small fraction of their rest mass is ejected, either dynamically or secularly. This material is neutron-rich and its nucleosynthesis could provide the astrophysical site for the production of heavy elements in the universe, together with a kilonova signal confirming neutron-star mergers as the origin of short gamma-ray bursts. We perform full general-relativistic simulations of binary neutron-star mergers employing three different nuclear-physics EOSs, considering both equal-and unequalmass configurations, and adopting a leakage scheme to account for neutrino radiative losses. Using a combination of techniques, we carry out an extensive and systematic study of the hydrodynamical, thermodynamical, and geometrical properties of the matter ejected dynamically, employing the WinNet nuclear-reaction network to recover the relative abundances of heavy elements produced by each configurations. Among the results obtained, three are particularly important. First, we find that both the properties of the dynamical ejecta and the nucleosynthesis yields are robust against variations of the EOS and masses, and match very well the observed chemical abundances. Second, using a conservative but robust criterion for unbound matter, we find that the amount of ejected mass is 10 −3 M , hence at least one order of magnitude smaller than what normally assumed in modelling kilonova signals. Finally, using a simplified and gray-opacity model we assess the observability of the infrared kilonova emission finding, that for all binaries the luminosity peaks around ∼ 1/2 day in the H-band, reaching a maximum magnitude of −13, and decreasing rapidly after one day. These rather low luminosities make the prospects for detecting kilonovae less promising than what assumed so far.
The electric dipole strength distribution in 120 Sn between 5 and 22 MeV has been determined at RCNP Osaka from polarization transfer observables measured in proton inelastic scattering at E0 = 295 MeV and forward angles including 0 • . Combined with photoabsorption data a highly precise electric dipole polarizability αD( 120 Sn) = 8.93(36) fm 3 is extracted. The dipole polarizability as isovector observable par excellence carries direct information on the nuclear symmetry energy and its density dependence. The correlation of the new value with the well established αD( 208 Pb) serves as a test of its prediction by nuclear energy density functionals (EDFs). Models based on modern Skyrme interactions describe the data fairly well while most calculations based on relativistic Hamiltonians cannot.PACS numbers: 21.10. Ky, 25.40.Ep, 21.60.Jz, 27.60.+j The nuclear equation of state (EOS) describing the energy of nuclear matter as function of its density has wide impact on nuclear physics and astrophysics [1] as well as physics beyond the standard model [2,3]. The EOS of symmetric nuclear matter with equal proton and neutron densities is well constrained from the ground state properties of finite nuclei, especially in the region of saturation density ρ 0 ≃ 0.16 fm −3 [4]. However, the description of astrophysical systems as, e.g., neutron stars requires knowledge of the EoS for asymmetric matter [5][6][7][8] which is related to the leading isovector parameters of nuclear matter, viz. the symmetry energy (J) and its derivative with respect to density (L) [9]. For a recent overview of experimental and theoretical studies of the symmetry energy see Ref. [10]. In spite of steady extension of knowledge on exotic nuclei, just these isovector properties are poorly determined by fits to experimental ground state data because the valley of nuclear stability is still extremely narrow along isotopic chains [11][12][13]. Thus one needs observables in finite nuclei specifically sensitive to isovector properties to better confine J and L. There are two such observables, the neutron skin r skin in nuclei with large neutron excess and the (static) dipole polarizability α D .The neutron skin thickness r skin = r n − r p defined as the difference of the neutron and proton root-meansquare radii r n,p is determined by the interplay between the surface tension and the pressure of excess neutrons on the core described by L [14,15]. Studies within nuclear density-funtional theory [16] show for all EDFs a strong correlation between r skin and the isovector symmetry energy parameters [17][18][19]. The most studied case so far is 208 Pb, where r skin has been derived from coherent photoproduction of π 0 mesons [20], antiproton annihilation [21,22], proton elastic scattering at 650 MeV [23] and 295 MeV [24], and from the dipole polarizability [25]. A nearly model-independent determination of the neutron skin is possible by measuring the weak form factor of nuclei with parity-violating elastic electron scattering [26]. Such an experiment has b...
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