Testing the formation scenarios of binary neutron star systems with measurements of the neutron star moment of inertia
William G. Newton, Andrew W. Steiner, Kent Yagi

TL;DR
This paper investigates how measurements of neutron star moments of inertia can distinguish between different formation scenarios of binary neutron star systems, providing a new method to understand their origins and improve population models.
Contribution
It introduces a robust relationship between neutron star moment of inertia and binding energy, aiding in differentiating formation scenarios like ECSN and FeCCSN.
Findings
The I-Love-Q relation is more robust than previous correlations.
Measurement of the moment of inertia can discriminate formation scenarios.
Advanced LIGO can measure tidal polarizability at 200 Mpc.
Abstract
Two low mass neutron stars, J0737-3039B and the companion to J1756-2251, show strong evidence of being formed from the collapse of an ONeMg core in an electron capture supernova (ECSN) or in an ultra-stripped iron core collapse supernova (FeCCSN). Using three different systematically generated sets of equations of state we explore the relationship between the moment of inertia of J0737-3039A and the binding energy of the two low mass neutron stars. We find this relationship, a less strict variant of the recently discovered I-Love-Q relations, is nevertheless more robust than a previously explored correlation between the binding energy and the slope of the nuclear symmetry energy L. We find that, if either J0737-3039B or the J1756-2251 companion were formed in an ECSN, no more than 0.06 solar masses could have been lost from the progenitor core, more than four times the mass loss…
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