Constraining the onset density of the hadron-quark phase transition with gravitational-wave observations
Sebastian Blacker, Niels-Uwe F. Bastian, Andreas Bauswein, David B., Blaschke, Tobias Fischer, Micaela Oertel, Theodoros Soultanis, Stefan Typel

TL;DR
This paper investigates how gravitational-wave signals from neutron star mergers can reveal the density at which hadron-quark phase transitions occur, providing a method to constrain this onset density through GW observations.
Contribution
It introduces a new procedure to constrain the onset density of the hadron-quark phase transition using correlations between postmerger GW frequency and tidal deformability.
Findings
Postmerger GW frequency increases with phase transition occurrence.
Tight correlations between GW observables and maximum density during remnant evolution.
Method to set upper or lower limits on the phase transition onset density based on GW data.
Abstract
We study the possible occurrence of the hadron-quark phase transition (PT) during the merging of neutron star binaries by hydrodynamical simulations employing a set of temperature dependent hybrid equations of state (EoSs). Following previous work we describe an unambiguous and measurable signature of deconfined quark matter in the gravitational-wave (GW) signal of neutron star binary mergers including equal-mass and unequal-mass systems of different total binary mass. The softening of the EoS by the PT at higher densities, i.e. after merging, leads to a characteristic increase of the dominant postmerger GW frequency f_peak relative to the tidal deformability Lambda inferred during the premerger inspiral phase. Hence, measuring such an increase of the postmerger frequency provides evidence for the presence of a strong PT. If the postmerger frequency and the tidal deformability are…
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