Three-dimensional GRMHD simulations of neutrino-cooled accretion disks from neutron star mergers [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1711.00868


Merging binaries consisting of two neutron stars (NS), or of a NS and a stellar-mass black hole, typically form a massive accretion torus around the remnant black hole or long-lived NS. Outflows from these neutrino-cooled accretion disks represent an important site for $r$-process nucleosynthesis and the generation of kilonovae. We present the first three-dimensional, general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) simulations including weak interactions and a realistic equation of state of such accretion disks over viscous timescales ($380\,\mathrm{ms}$). We witness the emergence of steady-state MHD turbulence, a magnetic dynamo with a $\sim!20\,\mathrm{ms}$ cycle, and the generation of a `hot’ disk corona that launches powerful thermal outflows aided by the energy released as free nucleons recombine into $\alpha$-particles. We identify a self-regulation mechanism that keeps the midplane electron fraction low ($Y_e\sim0.1$) over viscous timescales. This neutron-rich reservoir in turn feeds outflows which retain a sufficiently low value of $Y_e\approx 0.2$ to robustly synthesize third peak $r$-process elements. The quasi-spherical outflows are projected to unbind $40\%$ of the initial disk mass with typical asymptotic escape velocities of $0.1c$, and may thus represent the dominant mass ejection mechanism in NS–NS mergers. Including neutrino absorption, our findings agree with previous hydrodynamical $\alpha-$disk simulations that the entire range of $r$-process nuclei from the first to the third $r$-process peak can be synthesized in the outflows, in good agreement with observed solar system abundances. The asymptotic escape velocities and the quantity of ejecta, when extrapolated to moderately higher disk masses, are consistent with those needed to explain the red kilonova emission following the NS merger GW170817.

Read this paper on arXiv…

D. Siegel and B. Metzger
Mon, 6 Nov 17
53/53

Comments: 17 figures, 23 pages