Gravitational wave emission from a magnetically deformed non-barotropic neutron star
Alpha Mastrano, Andrew Melatos, Andreas Reisenegger, Taner Akg\"un

TL;DR
This paper models gravitational wave emission from magnetically deformed neutron stars without assuming a barotropic equation of state, providing new formulas to relate internal magnetic field configurations to observable gravitational wave signals.
Contribution
It introduces a non-barotropic model for neutron star deformations, deriving relations between magnetic field energy ratios and ellipticity, and applies these to constrain internal magnetic fields from gravitational wave observations.
Findings
Crab pulsar requires a strong internal toroidal field for detectable gravitational waves.
Cas A CCO could emit detectable signals at 300 Hz with a toroidal field of ~10^{13} T.
Newborn magnetars with rapid rotation are promising gravitational wave sources.
Abstract
A strong candidate for a source of gravitational waves is a highly magnetised, rapidly rotating neutron star (magnetar) deformed by internal magnetic stresses. We calculate the mass quadrupole moment by perturbing a zeroth-order hydrostatic equilibrium by an axisymmetric magnetic field with a \emph{linked poloidal-toroidal structure}. In this work, we do \emph{not} require the model star to obey a barotropic equation of state (as a realistic neutron star is not barotropic), allowing us to explore the hydromagnetic equilibria with fewer constraints. We derive the relation between the ratio of poloidal-to-total field energy and ellipticity and briefly compare our results to those obtained using the barotropic assumption. Then, we present some examples of how our results can be applied to astrophysical contexts. First, we show how our formulae, in conjunction with…
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