Multi-messenger observations of neutron rich matter
C. J. Horowitz

TL;DR
This paper reviews multiple observational and experimental approaches, including gravitational waves, X-ray, neutrino detection, and laboratory experiments, to study neutron rich matter relevant to nuclear physics and astrophysics.
Contribution
It synthesizes recent advances across diverse methods, highlighting how combined observations and experiments deepen understanding of neutron rich matter and neutron stars.
Findings
Neutron star crust is very strong and can support detectable mountains.
Parity violating electron scattering measures neutron radius in lead, impacting neutron star models.
Gravitational wave observations provide new insights into neutron rich matter properties.
Abstract
Neutron rich matter is central to many fundamental questions in nuclear physics and astrophysics. Moreover, this material is being studied with an extraordinary variety of new tools such as the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB) and the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (LIGO). We describe the Lead Radius Experiment (PREX) that uses parity violating electron scattering to measure the neutron radius in Pb. This has important implications for neutron stars and their crusts. We discuss X-ray observations of neutron star radii. These also have important implications for neutron rich matter. Gravitational waves (GW) open a new window on neutron rich matter. They come from sources such as neutron star mergers, rotating neutron star mountains, and collective r-mode oscillations. Using large scale molecular dynamics simulations, we find neutron star crust to be…
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