Einstein's theory of general relativity predicts that the only stationary configuration of an isolated black hole is the Kerr spacetime, which has a unique multipolar structure and a spherical shape when nonspinning. This is in striking contrast to the case of other self-gravitating objects, which instead can in principle have arbitrary deformations even in the static case. Here, we develop a general perturbative framework to construct stationary stars with small axisymmetric deformations and study explicitly compact stars with an intrinsic quadrupole moment. The latter can be sustained, for instance, by crust stresses or strong magnetic fields. While our framework is general, we focus on quadrupolar deformations of neutron stars induced by an anisotropic crust, which continuously connect to spherical neutron stars in the isotropic limit. Deformed neutron stars might provide a more accurate description for isolated and binary compact objects and can be used to improve constraints on the neutron-star equation of state through gravitational-wave detections and through the observation of low-mass X-ray binaries. We argue that, for values of the dimensionless intrinsic quadrupole moment of few percent or higher (which can be sustained by an elastic crust with ordinary parameters), the effect of the deformation is stronger than that of tidal interactions in coalescing neutron-star binaries, and might also significantly affect the electromagnetic signal from accreting neutron stars. Current observational bounds on the post-Newtonian coefficients in the gravitational waveform signal from GW170817 do not exclude that the neutron stars in the binary had some significant intrinsic deformation.
Axisymmetric deformations of neutron stars and gravitational-wave astronomy / Raposo, G.; Pani, P.. - In: PHYSICAL REVIEW D. - ISSN 2470-0010. - 102:4(2020). [10.1103/PhysRevD.102.044045]
Axisymmetric deformations of neutron stars and gravitational-wave astronomy
Pani P.
2020
Abstract
Einstein's theory of general relativity predicts that the only stationary configuration of an isolated black hole is the Kerr spacetime, which has a unique multipolar structure and a spherical shape when nonspinning. This is in striking contrast to the case of other self-gravitating objects, which instead can in principle have arbitrary deformations even in the static case. Here, we develop a general perturbative framework to construct stationary stars with small axisymmetric deformations and study explicitly compact stars with an intrinsic quadrupole moment. The latter can be sustained, for instance, by crust stresses or strong magnetic fields. While our framework is general, we focus on quadrupolar deformations of neutron stars induced by an anisotropic crust, which continuously connect to spherical neutron stars in the isotropic limit. Deformed neutron stars might provide a more accurate description for isolated and binary compact objects and can be used to improve constraints on the neutron-star equation of state through gravitational-wave detections and through the observation of low-mass X-ray binaries. We argue that, for values of the dimensionless intrinsic quadrupole moment of few percent or higher (which can be sustained by an elastic crust with ordinary parameters), the effect of the deformation is stronger than that of tidal interactions in coalescing neutron-star binaries, and might also significantly affect the electromagnetic signal from accreting neutron stars. Current observational bounds on the post-Newtonian coefficients in the gravitational waveform signal from GW170817 do not exclude that the neutron stars in the binary had some significant intrinsic deformation.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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