What to expect: kilonova light curve predictions via equation of state marginalization
Efficient multi-messenger observations of gravitational-wave candidates from compact binary coalescence candidate events rely on data products reported in low-latency by the International Gravitational-wave Network (IGWN). While data products such as \(\texttt{HasNS}\), the probability of at least o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | arXiv.org 2024-10 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Efficient multi-messenger observations of gravitational-wave candidates from compact binary coalescence candidate events rely on data products reported in low-latency by the International Gravitational-wave Network (IGWN). While data products such as \(\texttt{HasNS}\), the probability of at least one neutron star, and \(\texttt{HasRemnant}\), the probability of remnant matter forming after merger, exist, these are not direct observables for a potential kilonova. Here, we present new kilonova light curve and ejecta mass data products derived from merger quantities measured in low latency, by marginalizing over our uncertainty in our understanding of the neutron star equation of state and using measurements of the source properties of the merger, including masses and spins. Two additional types of data products are proposed. The first is the probability of a candidate event having mass ejecta (\(m_{\mathrm{ej}}\)) greater than \(10^{-3} M_\odot\), which we denote as \(\texttt{HasEjecta}\). The second are \(m_{\mathrm{ej}}\) estimates and accompanying \(\texttt{ugrizy}\) and \(\texttt{HJK}\) kilonova light curves predictions produced from a surrogate model trained on a grid of kilonova light curves from \(\texttt{POSSIS}\), a time-dependent, three-dimensional Monte Carlo radiative transfer code. We are developing these data products in the context of the IGWN low-latency alert infrastructure, and will be advocating for their use and release for future detections. |
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ISSN: | 2331-8422 |