TL;DR
This paper derives an empirical neutron star equation of state from observational data, constraining nuclear matter properties and neutron star characteristics, and comparing these with laboratory experiments and theoretical models.
Contribution
It introduces a Bayesian framework to determine nuclear parameters from astrophysical data, providing new constraints on the neutron star equation of state and related nuclear physics.
Findings
Neutron star radii are around 11-12 km for 1.4 solar masses.
The equation of state stiffens at higher densities, allowing maximum masses of 1.9-2.2 solar masses.
Several common equations of state are inconsistent with observational constraints.
Abstract
We determine an empirical dense matter equation of state from a heterogeneous dataset of six neutron stars: three type I X-ray bursters with photospheric radius expansion, studied by Ozel et al., and three transient low-mass X-ray binaries. We critically assess the mass and radius determinations from the X-ray burst sources and show explicitly how systematic uncertainties, such as the photospheric radius at touchdown, affect the most probable masses and radii. We introduce a parameterized equation of state and use a Markov Chain Monte Carlo algorithm within a Bayesian framework to determine nuclear parameters such as the incompressibility and the density dependence of the bulk symmetry energy. Using this framework we show, for the first time, that these parameters, predicted solely on the basis of astrophysical observations, all lie in ranges expected from nuclear systematics and…
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