4.7 Article

Dynamical mass ejection from the merger of asymmetric binary neutron stars: Radiation-hydrodynamics study in general relativity

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 93, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.93.124046

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. HPCI Strategic Program of Japanese MEXT [hp140211, hp150225]
  2. post-K computer priority project of Japanese MEXT [9]
  3. RIKEN iTHES project
  4. [24244028]
  5. [25103510]
  6. [25105508]
  7. [24740163]
  8. [26400267]
  9. [15K05077]
  10. [15H06857]
  11. [15H00783]
  12. [15H00836]
  13. [16H02183]
  14. [24103001]
  15. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15H00782, 15H00783, 15H00836, 15K05077, 16H06342, 16H02183, 15H06857, 26400267, 16K17706] Funding Source: KAKEN

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We perform neutrino radiation-hydrodynamics simulations for the merger of asymmetric binary neutron stars in numerical relativity. Neutron stars are modeled by soft and moderately stiff finite-temperature equations of state (EOS). We find that the properties of the dynamical ejecta such as the total mass, neutron richness profile, and specific entropy profile depend on the mass ratio of the binary systems for a given EOS in a unique manner. For a soft EOS (SFHo), the total ejecta mass depends weakly on the mass ratio, but the average of electron number per baryon (Y-e) and specific entropy (s) of the ejecta decreases significantly with the increase of the degree of mass asymmetry. For a stiff EOS (DD2), with the increase of the mass asymmetry degree, the total ejecta mass significantly increases while the average of Y-e and s moderately decreases. We find again that only for the SFHo, the total ejecta mass exceeds 0.01M(circle dot) irrespective of the mass ratio chosen in this paper. The ejecta have a variety of electron number per baryon with an average approximately between Y-e similar to 0.2 and similar to 0.3 irrespective of the EOS employed, which is well suited for the production of the rapid neutron capture process heavy elements (second and third peaks), although its averaged value decreases with the increase of the degree of mass asymmetry.

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