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Thermodynamical Description of Hot, Rapidly Rotating Neutron Stars, Protoneutron Stars, and Neutron Star Merger Remnants

P. S. Koliogiannis, Ch. C. Moustakidis

2021The Astrophysical Journal37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The prediction of the equation of state of hot, dense nuclear matter is one of the most complicated and interesting problems in nuclear astrophysics. At the same time, knowledge of it is the basic ingredient for some of the most interesting studies. In the present work, we concentrate our study on the construction of the equation of state of hot, dense nuclear matter, related mainly to the interior of the neutron star. We employ a theoretical nuclear model, which includes momentum-dependent interaction among the nucleons, along with state-of-the-art microscopic calculations. Thermal effects are introduced in a self-consistent way, and a set of isothermal and isentropic equations of state are predicted. The predicted equations of state are used in order to acquire and extend the knowledge of the thermal effect on both nonrotating and rapidly rotating with the Kepler frequency neutron stars. The simultaneous study of thermal and rotation effects provides useful information on some of the most important quantities, including the mass (gravitational and baryon) and radius, the Kepler frequency and Kerr parameter, the moment of inertia, etc. These quantities are directly related to studies of protoneutron stars and mainly the hot and rapidly rotating remnant of a binary neutron star merger. Data from the late observations of binary neutron star mergers and the present study may offer useful tools for investigation and help in providing possible constraints on the equation of state of nuclear matter.

Topics & Concepts

Neutron starPhysicsEquation of stateThermalAstrophysicsBinary numberNeutronIsentropic processNuclear physicsNuclear matterIsothermal processRotation (mathematics)Stellar evolutionr-processNeutron temperatureComputational physicsBinary starStar (game theory)X-ray binaryState (computer science)Moment (physics)Dense matterNuclear reactionNucleosynthesisGravitational waveClassical mechanicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves ResearchGamma-ray bursts and supernovaeNuclear physics research studies