Probing neutron stars with the full premerger and postmerger gravitational wave signal from binary coalescences
Abstract
The gravitational wave signal emitted during the coalescence of two neutron stars carries information about the stars' internal structure. During the long inspiral phase the main matter observable is the tidal interaction between the binary components, an effect that can be parametrically modeled with compact-binary solutions to general relativity. After the binary merger the main observable is frequency modes of the remnant, most commonly giving rise to a short-duration signal accessible only through numerical simulations. The complicated morphology and the decreasing detector sensitivity in the relevant frequencies currently hinder detection of the postmerger signal and motivate separate analyses for the premerger and postmerger data. However, planned and ongoing detector improvements could soon put the postmerger signal within reach. In this study we target the whole premerger and postmerger signal without an artificial separation at the binary merger. We construct a hybrid analysis that models the inspiral with templates based on analytical calculations and calibrated to numerical relativity and the postmerger signal with a flexible morphology-independent analysis. Applying this analysis to GW170817 we find, as expected, that the postmerger signal remains undetected. We further study simulated signals and find that we can reconstruct the full signal and simultaneously estimate both the premerger tidal deformation and the postmerger signal frequency content. Our analysis allows us to study neutron star physics using all the data available and directly test the premerger and postmerger signal for consistency thus probing effects such as the onset of the hadron-quark phase transition.
- Publication:
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Physical Review D
- Pub Date:
- May 2022
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2202.09382
- Bibcode:
- 2022PhRvD.105j4019W
- Keywords:
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- General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology;
- Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
- E-Print:
- 18 pages, 17 figures, final published version