Properties of hypermassive neutron stars formed in mergers of spinning binaries
Wolfgang Kastaun, Filippo Galeazzi

TL;DR
This study uses advanced numerical simulations to analyze the structure, dynamics, and gravitational wave signatures of hypermassive neutron stars formed from spinning binary mergers, revealing new insights into their oscillations and matter ejection.
Contribution
First to simulate spinning binary neutron star mergers with nuclear physics equations of state, analyzing the impact of initial spin on HMNS properties and gravitational wave signals.
Findings
Radial oscillations modulate GW frequency, causing spectral peaks.
HMNSs can have a slowly rotating core with a Keplerian envelope.
Initial NS spin influences unbound matter and shock wave formation.
Abstract
We present numerical simulations of binary neutron star mergers, comparing irrotational binaries to binaries of NSs rotating aligned to the orbital angular momentum. For the first time, we study spinning BNSs employing nuclear physics equations of state, namely the ones of Lattimer and Swesty as well as Shen, Horowitz, and Teige. We study mainly equal mass systems leading to a hypermassive neutron star (HMNS), and analyze in detail its structure and dynamics. In order to exclude gauge artifacts, we introduce a novel coordinate system used for post-processing. The results for our equal mass models show that the strong radial oscillations of the HMNS modulate the instantaneous frequency of the gravitational wave (GW) signal to an extend that leads to separate peaks in the corresponding Fourier spectrum. In particular, the high frequency peaks which are often attributed to combination…
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