Measuring the neutron star equation of state using X-ray timing
Anna L. Watts, Nils Andersson, Deepto Chakrabarty, Marco Feroci, Kai, Hebeler, Gianluca Israel, Frederick K. Lamb, M. Coleman Miller, Sharon, Morsink, Feryal \"Ozel, Alessandro Patruno, Juri Poutanen, Dimitrios Psaltis,, Achim Schwenk, Andrew W. Steiner, Luigi Stella

TL;DR
This paper discusses three X-ray timing techniques—waveform modelling, spin distribution analysis, and seismic oscillation detection—to constrain the neutron star equation of state, highlighting their potential when used with a 10m² instrument.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive approach combining multiple X-ray timing methods to improve constraints on neutron star dense matter physics.
Findings
Waveform modelling constrains mass and radius with relativistic effects.
Spin distribution analysis informs on the moment of inertia and torque mechanisms.
Seismic oscillation frequencies depend on the dense matter equation of state.
Abstract
One of the primary science goals of the next generation of hard X-ray timing instruments is to determine the equation of state of the matter at supranuclear densities inside neutron stars, by measuring the radius of neutron stars with different masses to accuracies of a few percent. Three main techniques can be used to achieve this goal. The first involves waveform modelling. The flux we observe from a hotspot on the neutron star surface offset from the rotational pole will be modulated by the star's rotation, giving rise to a pulsation. Information about mass and radius is encoded into the pulse profile via relativistic effects, and tight constraints on mass and radius can be obtained. The second technique involves characterising the spin distribution of accreting neutron stars. The most rapidly rotating stars provide a very clean constraint, since the mass-shedding limit is a function…
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