Equation-of-state-independent relations in neutron stars

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Equation-of-state-independent relations in neutron stars. / Maselli, Andrea; Cardoso, Vitor; Ferrari, Valeria; Gualtieri, Leonardo; Pani, Paolo.

In: Physical Review D, Vol. 88, No. 2, 023007, 10.07.2013.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Maselli, A, Cardoso, V, Ferrari, V, Gualtieri, L & Pani, P 2013, 'Equation-of-state-independent relations in neutron stars', Physical Review D, vol. 88, no. 2, 023007. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.88.023007

APA

Maselli, A., Cardoso, V., Ferrari, V., Gualtieri, L., & Pani, P. (2013). Equation-of-state-independent relations in neutron stars. Physical Review D, 88(2), [023007]. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.88.023007

Vancouver

Maselli A, Cardoso V, Ferrari V, Gualtieri L, Pani P. Equation-of-state-independent relations in neutron stars. Physical Review D. 2013 Jul 10;88(2). 023007. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.88.023007

Author

Maselli, Andrea ; Cardoso, Vitor ; Ferrari, Valeria ; Gualtieri, Leonardo ; Pani, Paolo. / Equation-of-state-independent relations in neutron stars. In: Physical Review D. 2013 ; Vol. 88, No. 2.

Bibtex

@article{9727d7c5389b4db6897ef33071226727,
title = "Equation-of-state-independent relations in neutron stars",
abstract = "Neutron stars are extremely relativistic objects which abound in our universe and yet are poorly understood, due to the high uncertainty on how matter behaves in the extreme conditions which prevail in the stellar core. It has recently been pointed out that the moment of inertia I, the Love number lambda, and the spin-induced quadrupole moment Q of an isolated neutron star, are related through functions which are practically independent of the equation of state. These surprising universal I - lambda - Q relations pave the way for a better understanding of neutron stars, most notably via gravitational-wave emission. Gravitational-wave observations will probe highly dynamical binaries and it is important to understand whether the universality of the I - lambda - Q relations survives strong-field and finite-size effects. We apply a post-Newtonian-affine approach to model tidal deformations in compact binaries and show that the I - lambda relation depends on the inspiral frequency, but is insensitive to the equation of state. We provide a fit for the universal relation, which is valid up to a gravitational wave frequency of similar to 900 Hz and accurate to within a few percent. Our results strengthen the universality of I - lambda - Q relations, and are relevant for gravitational-wave observations with advanced ground-based interferometers. We also discuss the possibility of using the Love-compactness relation to measure the neutron-star radius with an uncertainty less than or similar to 10% from gravitational-wave observations.",
author = "Andrea Maselli and Vitor Cardoso and Valeria Ferrari and Leonardo Gualtieri and Paolo Pani",
year = "2013",
month = jul,
day = "10",
doi = "10.1103/PhysRevD.88.023007",
language = "English",
volume = "88",
journal = "Physical Review D",
issn = "2470-0010",
publisher = "American Physical Society",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Equation-of-state-independent relations in neutron stars

AU - Maselli, Andrea

AU - Cardoso, Vitor

AU - Ferrari, Valeria

AU - Gualtieri, Leonardo

AU - Pani, Paolo

PY - 2013/7/10

Y1 - 2013/7/10

N2 - Neutron stars are extremely relativistic objects which abound in our universe and yet are poorly understood, due to the high uncertainty on how matter behaves in the extreme conditions which prevail in the stellar core. It has recently been pointed out that the moment of inertia I, the Love number lambda, and the spin-induced quadrupole moment Q of an isolated neutron star, are related through functions which are practically independent of the equation of state. These surprising universal I - lambda - Q relations pave the way for a better understanding of neutron stars, most notably via gravitational-wave emission. Gravitational-wave observations will probe highly dynamical binaries and it is important to understand whether the universality of the I - lambda - Q relations survives strong-field and finite-size effects. We apply a post-Newtonian-affine approach to model tidal deformations in compact binaries and show that the I - lambda relation depends on the inspiral frequency, but is insensitive to the equation of state. We provide a fit for the universal relation, which is valid up to a gravitational wave frequency of similar to 900 Hz and accurate to within a few percent. Our results strengthen the universality of I - lambda - Q relations, and are relevant for gravitational-wave observations with advanced ground-based interferometers. We also discuss the possibility of using the Love-compactness relation to measure the neutron-star radius with an uncertainty less than or similar to 10% from gravitational-wave observations.

AB - Neutron stars are extremely relativistic objects which abound in our universe and yet are poorly understood, due to the high uncertainty on how matter behaves in the extreme conditions which prevail in the stellar core. It has recently been pointed out that the moment of inertia I, the Love number lambda, and the spin-induced quadrupole moment Q of an isolated neutron star, are related through functions which are practically independent of the equation of state. These surprising universal I - lambda - Q relations pave the way for a better understanding of neutron stars, most notably via gravitational-wave emission. Gravitational-wave observations will probe highly dynamical binaries and it is important to understand whether the universality of the I - lambda - Q relations survives strong-field and finite-size effects. We apply a post-Newtonian-affine approach to model tidal deformations in compact binaries and show that the I - lambda relation depends on the inspiral frequency, but is insensitive to the equation of state. We provide a fit for the universal relation, which is valid up to a gravitational wave frequency of similar to 900 Hz and accurate to within a few percent. Our results strengthen the universality of I - lambda - Q relations, and are relevant for gravitational-wave observations with advanced ground-based interferometers. We also discuss the possibility of using the Love-compactness relation to measure the neutron-star radius with an uncertainty less than or similar to 10% from gravitational-wave observations.

U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevD.88.023007

DO - 10.1103/PhysRevD.88.023007

M3 - Journal article

VL - 88

JO - Physical Review D

JF - Physical Review D

SN - 2470-0010

IS - 2

M1 - 023007

ER -

ID: 300163630