Impact of the equation-of-state -- gravity degeneracy on constraining the nuclear symmetry energy from astrophysical observables
Xiao-Tao He, F. J. Fattoyev, Bao-An Li, W. G. Newton

TL;DR
This paper investigates how uncertainties in nuclear symmetry energy affect neutron star properties and explores how astrophysical observations can help distinguish between effects of the EOS and gravity theories.
Contribution
It analyzes the impact of symmetry energy parameters on neutron star observables within GR and scalar-tensor gravity, helping to break the EOS-gravity degeneracy.
Findings
Variation in symmetry energy slope L significantly affects neutron star binding energy and curvature.
Effects of the incompressibility K_0 are negligible on neutron star properties.
Recent pulsar measurements help constrain the symmetry energy's density dependence.
Abstract
There is a degeneracy between the equation of state (EOS) of superdense neutron-rich nuclear matter and the strong-field gravity in understanding properties of neutron stars. While the EOS is still poorly known, there are also longstanding ambiguities in choosing General Relativity or alternative gravity theories in the not-so-well tested strong-field regime. Besides possible appearance of hyperons and new phases, the most uncertain part of the nucleonic EOS is currently the density dependence of nuclear symmetry energy. To provide information that may help break the EOS-gravity degeneracy, we investigate effects of symmetry energy within its uncertain range determined by terrestrial nuclear laboratory experiments on the gravitational binding energy and spacetime curvature of neutron stars within GR and the scalar-tensor (ST) theory of gravity. In particular, we focus on effects of the…
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