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Published April 15, 2019 | Published + Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Equation-of-state insensitive relations after GW170817

Abstract

The thermodynamic relation between pressure and density (i.e., the equation of state) of cold supranuclear matter is critical in describing neutron stars, yet it remains one of the largest uncertainties in nuclear physics. The extraction of tidal deformabilities from the gravitational waves emitted in the coalescence of neutron star binaries, such as GW170817, is a promising tool to probe this thermodynamic relation. Equation-of-state insensitive relations between symmetric and antisymmetric combinations of individual tidal deformabilities, the so-called "binary Love relations", have proven important to infer the radius of neutron stars, and thus constrain the equation of state, from such gravitational waves. A similar set of relations between the moment of inertia, the tidal deformability, the quadrupole moment, and the compactness of neutron stars, the so-called "I-Love-Q" and "C-Love" relations, allow for future tests of General Relativity in the extreme gravity regime. But even the most insensitive of such relations still presents some degree of equation-of-state variability that could introduce systematic uncertainties in parameter extraction and in model selection. We here reduce this variability by more than 50% by imposing a prior on the allowed set of equations of state, derived from the posteriors generated from the analysis of GW170817. The resulting increase in insensitivity reduces systematic uncertainties in the extraction of the tidal deformability from future gravitational wave observations, although statistical uncertainties currently dominate the error budget, and will continue to do so until the era of Voyager-class detectors.

Additional Information

© 2019 American Physical Society. Received 8 March 2019; published 30 April 2019. K. Y. acknowledges support from NSF Grant No. PHY-1806776. K. Y. would like to also acknowledge networking support by the COST Action GWverse CA16104. N. Y. acknowledges support from NSF Grant No. PHY-1759615 and NASA Grants No. NNX16AB98G and No. 0NSSC17M0041. This research has made use of data, software and/or web tools obtained from the Gravitational Wave Open Science Center (https://www.gw-openscience.org), a service of LIGO Laboratory, the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, and the Virgo Collaboration. LIGO is funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation. Virgo is funded by the French Centre National de Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), the Italian Istituto Nazionale della Fisica Nucleare (INFN), and the Dutch Nikhef, with contributions by Polish and Hungarian institutes. The authors are grateful for computational resources provided by the LIGO Laboratory and supported by National Science Foundation Grants No. PHY-0757058 and No. PHY-0823459.

Attached Files

Published - PhysRevD.99.083016.pdf

Accepted Version - 1903.03909.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023