Prospects For High Frequency Burst Searches Following Binary Neutron Star Coalescence With Advanced Gravitational Wave Detectors
J. Clark, A. Bauswein, L. Cadonati, H.-T. Janka, C. Pankow, N., Stergioulas

TL;DR
This paper presents a new method combining waveform reconstruction and Bayesian model selection to detect and analyze post-merger gravitational wave signals from binary neutron star mergers, aiming to constrain neutron star properties.
Contribution
The authors develop and demonstrate a novel algorithm for discriminating post-merger scenarios and measuring oscillation frequencies using simulated data from advanced gravitational wave detectors.
Findings
Post-merger signals detectable up to 10-25 Mpc
High accuracy in scenario discrimination (~95%)
Oscillation frequency measured within ~10 Hz, constraining neutron star radius
Abstract
The equation of state plays a critical role in the physics of the merger of two neutron stars. Recent numerical simulations with microphysical equation of state suggest the outcome of such events depends on the mass of the neutron stars. For less massive systems, simulations favor the formation of a hypermassive, quasi-stable neutron star, whose oscillations produce a short, high frequency burst of gravitational radiation. Its dominant frequency content is tightly correlated with the radius of the neutron star, and its measurement can be used to constrain the supranuclear equation of state. In contrast, the merger of higher mass systems results in prompt gravitational collapse to a black hole. We have developed an algorithm which combines waveform reconstruction from a morphology-independent search for gravitational wave transients with Bayesian model selection, to discriminate between…
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