Abstract

At supranuclear densities, explored in the core of neutron stars, a strong phase transition from hadronic matter to more exotic forms of matter might be present. To test this hypothesis, binary neutron-star mergers offer a unique possibility to probe matter at densities that we can not create in any existing terrestrial experiment. In this work, we show that, if present, strong phase transitions can have a measurable imprint on the binary neutron-star coalescence and the emitted gravitational-wave signal. We construct a new parameterization of the supranuclear equation of state that allows us to test for the existence of a strong phase transition and extract its characteristic properties purely from the gravitational-wave signal of the inspiraling neutron stars. We test our approach using a Bayesian inference study simulating 600 signals with three different equations of state and find that for current gravitational-wave detector networks already twelve events might be sufficient to verify the presence of a strong phase transition. Finally, we use our methodology to analyze GW170817 and GW190425, but do not find any indication that a strong phase transition is present at densities probed during the inspiral.

Highlights

  • Neutron stars (NSs) are remnants of core-collapse supernovae and contain matter at the highest densities that we can observe in the Universe, up to several times nuclear saturation density, nsat = 0.16 fm−3, which corresponds to a mass density of 2.7×1014 g cm−3

  • The major differences between previous studies and our work are that we simultaneously (i) analyze equation of state (EOS) with different phase-transition signatures, i.e., one EOS with a twin-star solution which is commonly searched for, and two EOSs with phase transitions leading to single-branch solutions; (ii) analyze both simulated data and actual events with state-of-the-art Bayesian gravitational waves (GWs) data analysis techniques, which allows for hypothesis testing and parameter estimation at once; and (iii) explicitly demonstrate that our method is able to measure the microscopic characteristics of strong phase transitions by comparing injected with recovered parameters

  • We have presented a reliable way of searching for phase transitions in supranuclear matter using the inspiral waveform of binary NS mergers, which is successful if the resulting mass-radius relation has only one or multiple stable branches

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

We focus on three different EOS that experience a phase transition in the typical mass range explored in BNS systems and which show three different behaviors in the mass-radius relation For this purpose, we introduce a method, based on a new parametrization for EOSs at supranuclear densities, of testing GW data from the inspiral phase of a BNS merger for the appearance of a strong phase transition. The major differences between previous studies and our work are that we simultaneously (i) analyze EOSs with different phase-transition signatures, i.e., one EOS with a twin-star solution which is commonly searched for, and two EOSs with phase transitions leading to single-branch solutions; (ii) analyze both simulated data and actual events with state-of-the-art Bayesian GW data analysis techniques, which allows for hypothesis testing and parameter estimation at once; and (iii) explicitly demonstrate that our method is able to measure the microscopic characteristics of strong phase transitions by comparing injected with recovered parameters.

The equation of state of NS matter
Inspiral
Postmerger
EOS parametrization for phase transitions
MOCK DATA SIMULATION
Waveform approximants
Injection setup
Implementation
Method description
Method validation
Limitations of our analysis
ANALYSIS OF GW170817 AND GW190425
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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