We present a first exploration of the results of neutron star-black hole
mergers using black hole masses in the most likely range of
7M⊙−10M⊙, a neutrino leakage scheme, and a modeling of the neutron
star material through a finite-temperature nuclear-theory based equation of
state. In the range of black hole spins in which the neutron star is tidally
disrupted (χBH≳0.7), we show that the merger consistently
produces large amounts of cool (T≲1MeV), unbound,
neutron-rich material (Mej∼0.05M⊙−0.20M⊙). A comparable
amount of bound matter is initially divided between a hot disk (Tmax∼15MeV) with typical neutrino luminosity Lν∼1053erg/s, and a cooler tidal tail. After a short period of rapid
protonization of the disk lasting ∼10ms, the accretion disk cools
down under the combined effects of the fall-back of cool material from the
tail, continued accretion of the hottest material onto the black hole, and
neutrino emission. As the temperature decreases, the disk progressively becomes
more neutron-rich, with dimmer neutrino emission. This cooling process should
stop once the viscous heating in the disk (not included in our simulations)
balances the cooling. These mergers of neutron star-black hole binaries with
black hole masses MBH∼7M⊙−10M⊙ and black hole spins high
enough for the neutron star to disrupt provide promising candidates for the
production of short gamma-ray bursts, of bright infrared post-merger signals
due to the radioactive decay of unbound material, and of large amounts of
r-process nuclei.Comment: 20 pages, 19 figure