The evolution of the f-mode instability in neutron stars and gravitational wave detectability
A. Passamonti, E. Gaertig, K. D. Kokkotas. D. Doneva

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution of the f-mode instability in rapidly rotating neutron stars, assessing gravitational wave signals and effects of magnetic fields and r-modes, with implications for detection by LIGO/Virgo.
Contribution
It provides a detailed linear perturbation analysis of the f-mode instability evolution, including magnetic and r-mode effects, and estimates gravitational wave detectability from neutron stars.
Findings
Unstable f-modes in massive neutron stars can produce detectable gravitational waves.
Magnetic fields stronger than 1e12 G influence the evolution and detectability of gravitational waves.
Heat generated during saturation balances neutrino cooling, extending instability duration.
Abstract
We study the dynamical evolution of the gravitational-wave driven instability of the f-mode in rapidly rotating relativistic stars. With an approach based on linear perturbation theory we describe the evolution of the mode amplitude and follow the trajectory of a newborn neutron star through its instability window. The influence on the f-mode instability of the magnetic field and the presence of an unstable r-mode is also considered. Two different configurations are studied in more detail; an N = 1 polytrope with a typical mass and radius and a more massive polytropic N = 0.62 model with gravitational mass M = 1.98 Msun. We study several evolutions with different initial rotation rates and temperature and determine the gravitational waves radiated during the instability. In more massive models, an unstable f-mode with a saturation energy of about 1e-6 Msun c^2 may generate a…
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