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Published May 2, 2023 | Submitted
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Tidal Deformability Doppelgangers: II. Implications of a low-density phase transition in the neutron star equation of state

Abstract

Studying the properties of ultra-dense matter is one of the key goals of modern neutron star research. The measurement of the tidal deformability from the inspiral of a binary neutron star merger offers one promising method for constraining the equation of state (EoS) of cold, dense matter. In this work, we report on a new class of EoSs which have significantly different pressures at nuclear densities and large differences in stellar radii, but that predict surprisingly similar tidal deformabilities across the entire range of astrophysically-observed neutron star masses. Using a survey of 5 million piecewise polytropic EoSs, subject to four different sets of nuclear priors, we demonstrate that these "tidal deformability doppelgangers" occur generically. We find that they can differ substantially in the pressure (by up to a factor of 3 at nuclear densities) and in the radius of intermediate-mass neutron stars (by up to 0.5 km), but are observationally indistinguishable in their tidal deformabilities (ΔΛ ≾ 30) with the sensitivity of current gravitational wave detectors. We demonstrate that this near-degeneracy in the tidal deformability is a result of allowing for a phase transition at low densities. We show that a combination of input from nuclear theory (e.g., from chiral effective field theory), X-ray observations of neutron star radii, and/or the next generation of gravitational wave detectors will be able to significantly constrain these tidal deformability doppelgangers.

Additional Information

The authors thank Gabriele Bozzola, Katerina Chatziioannou, Pierre Christian, Feryal Özel, Dimitrios Psaltis, Jocelyn Read, Ingo Tews, and Nicolas Yunes for insightful comments on this work. The authors gratefully acknowledge support from postdoctoral fellowships at the Princeton Center for Theoretical Science, the Princeton Gravity Initiative, and the Institute for Advanced Study. CAR additionally acknowledges support as a John N. Bahcall Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study. This work was performed in part at the Aspen Center for Physics, which is supported by National Science Foundation grant PHY-1607611. The EoS parameter survey was performed on computational resources managed and supported by Princeton Research Computing, a consortium of groups including the Princeton Institute for Computational Science and Engineering (PICSciE) and the Office of Information Technology's High Performance Computing Center and Visualization Laboratory at Princeton University.

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Created:
August 20, 2023
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October 20, 2023