Gravitational-wave measurements of the tidal deformability in neutron-star binary coalescences can be used to infer the still unknown equation of state (EOS) of dense matter above the nuclear saturation density. By employing a Bayesian-ranking test, we quantify the ability of current and future gravitational-wave observations to discriminate among families of nuclear-physics based EOS which differ in particle content and ab initio microscopic calculations. While the constraining power of GW170817 is limited, we show that even twenty coalescences detected by LIGO-Virgo at design sensitivity are not enough to discriminate between EOS with similar softness but distinct microphysics. However, just a single detection with a third-generation detector such as the Einstein Telescope or Cosmic Explorer will rule out several families of EOS with very strong statistical significance and can discriminate among models which feature similar softness, hence, constraining the properties of nuclear matter to unprecedented levels.

Pacilio, C., Maselli, A., Fasano, M., Pani, P. (2022). Ranking Love Numbers for the Neutron Star Equation of State: The Need for Third-Generation Detectors. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 128(10) [10.1103/physrevlett.128.101101].

Ranking Love Numbers for the Neutron Star Equation of State: The Need for Third-Generation Detectors

Costantino Pacilio;
2022

Abstract

Gravitational-wave measurements of the tidal deformability in neutron-star binary coalescences can be used to infer the still unknown equation of state (EOS) of dense matter above the nuclear saturation density. By employing a Bayesian-ranking test, we quantify the ability of current and future gravitational-wave observations to discriminate among families of nuclear-physics based EOS which differ in particle content and ab initio microscopic calculations. While the constraining power of GW170817 is limited, we show that even twenty coalescences detected by LIGO-Virgo at design sensitivity are not enough to discriminate between EOS with similar softness but distinct microphysics. However, just a single detection with a third-generation detector such as the Einstein Telescope or Cosmic Explorer will rule out several families of EOS with very strong statistical significance and can discriminate among models which feature similar softness, hence, constraining the properties of nuclear matter to unprecedented levels.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Calculations; Coalescence; Cosmology; Equations of state; Gravitational effects; Stars
English
10-mar-2022
2022
128
10
101101
partially_open
Pacilio, C., Maselli, A., Fasano, M., Pani, P. (2022). Ranking Love Numbers for the Neutron Star Equation of State: The Need for Third-Generation Detectors. PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 128(10) [10.1103/physrevlett.128.101101].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/418723
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