The 050709 macronova and the GRB/macronova connection [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1603.07869


We reanalyzed the publicly-available optical/near-infrared afterglow observations of GRB 050709, the first short GRB from which an optical afterglow was detected. The $I$-band/F814W-band light curve is significantly shallower than the $R$-band light curve. This additional low-luminosity soft component can be a signature of a Li-Paczy\'{n}ski macronova (also known as kilonova) arising from $\sim 0.05~M_\odot$ r-process material launched by a compact binary merger. As macronovae are relatively weak and soft they can be identified only within the afterglows of relatively nearby ($z<0.4$) bursts that have sufficient near-infrared/optical data. There are five such events: GRBs 050709, 060505, 060614, 061201 and 130603B. However, the redshift of 061201 is unclear and there is doubt concerning the origin of GRB 060505. Remarkably, evidence for a macronova signature is found in the afterglow of each one of the remaining three events. This demonstrates that macronovae are ubiquitous. The significant mass ejection supports the suggestion that these events are significant and possible main sites of heavy r-process nucleosynthesis. The identification of two of the three macronova candidates in the $I$-band implies a more promising detection prospect for the ground-based survey.

Read this paper on arXiv…

Z. Jin, K. Hotokezaka, X. Li, et. al.
Mon, 28 Mar 16
9/40

Comments: 12 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Nature Communications