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Tidal Love numbers of neutron and self-bound quark stars

  • Ohio University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

354 Scopus citations

Abstract

Gravitational waves from the final stages of inspiraling binary neutron stars are expected to be one of the most important sources for ground-based gravitational wave detectors. The masses of the components are determinable from the orbital and chirp frequencies during the early part of the evolution, and large finite-size (tidal) effects are measurable toward the end of inspiral, but the gravitational wave signal is expected to be very complex at this time. Tidal effects during the early part of the evolution will form a very small correction, but during this phase the signal is relatively clean. The accumulated phase shift due to tidal corrections is characterized by a single quantity related to a star's tidal Love number. The Love number is sensitive, in particular, to the compactness parameter M/R and the star's internal structure, and its determination could provide an important constraint to the neutron star radius. We show that Love numbers of self-bound strange quark matter stars are qualitatively different from those of normal neutron stars. Observations of the tidal signature from coalescing compact binaries could therefore provide an important, and possibly unique, way to distinguish self-bound strange quark stars from normal neutron stars. Tidal signatures from self-bound strange quark stars with masses smaller than 1M are substantially smaller than those of normal stars owing to their smaller radii. Thus tidal signatures of stars less massive than 1M are probably not detectable with Advanced LIGO. For stars with masses in the range 1-2M the anticipated efficiency of the proposed Einstein telescope would be required for the detection of tidal signatures.

Original languageEnglish
Article number024016
JournalPhysical Review D - Particles, Fields, Gravitation and Cosmology
Volume82
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 15 2010

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