Measurement of the Radius of Neutron Stars with High S/N Quiescent Low-mass X-ray Binaries in Globular Clusters
Sebastien Guillot, Mathieu Servillat, Natalie A. Webb, Robert E., Rutledge

TL;DR
This study measures neutron star radii using high-quality X-ray spectra from quiescent low-mass X-ray binaries in globular clusters, supporting models of dense matter with small radii around 9 km.
Contribution
It provides a novel radius measurement for multiple neutron stars assuming a common radius, incorporating comprehensive uncertainties and using a Bayesian approach.
Findings
Neutron star radius estimated at 9.1 km with 90% confidence.
Results support equations of state predicting small neutron star radii.
Method integrates all quantifiable uncertainties for robust measurement.
Abstract
This paper presents the measurement of the neutron star (NS) radius using the thermal spectra from quiescent low-mass X-ray binaries (qLMXBs) inside globular clusters (GCs). Recent observations of NSs have presented evidence that cold ultra dense matter -- present in the core of NSs -- is best described by "normal matter" equations of state (EoSs). Such EoSs predict that the radii of NSs, Rns, are quasi-constant (within measurement errors, of ~10%) for astrophysically relevant masses (Mns > 0.5 Msun). The present work adopts this theoretical prediction as an assumption, and uses it to constrain a single Rns value from five qLMXB targets with available high signal-to-noise X-ray spectroscopic data. Employing a Markov-Chain Monte-Carlo approach, we produce the marginalized posterior distribution for Rns, constrained to be the same value for all five NSs in the sample. An effort was made…
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