Impact of the nuclear symmetry energy on the post-merger phase of a binary neutron star coalescence
Elias R. Most, Carolyn A. Raithel

TL;DR
This study investigates how the nuclear symmetry energy's slope parameter L influences the post-merger behavior of binary neutron star coalescence, finding limited impact on gravitational waves but a weak effect on mass ejection.
Contribution
It introduces new neutron star merger simulations varying the symmetry energy slope L to assess its effects beyond the inspiral phase.
Findings
Post-merger gravitational wave emission is mostly insensitive to L.
Dynamical mass ejection shows a weak dependence on L, with larger L producing more ejecta.
Abstract
The nuclear symmetry energy plays a key role in determining the equation of state of dense, neutron-rich matter, which governs the properties of both terrestrial nuclear matter as well as astrophysical neutron stars. A recent measurement of the neutron skin thickness from the PREX collaboration has lead to new constraints on the slope of the nuclear symmetry energy, L, which can be directly compared to inferences from gravitational-wave observations of the first binary neutron star merger inspiral, GW170817 In this paper, we explore a new regime for potentially constraining the slope, L, of the nuclear symmetry energy with future gravitational wave events: the post-merger phase a binary neutron star coalescence. In particular, we go beyond the inspiral phase, where imprints of the slope parameter L may be inferred from measurements of the tidal deformability, to consider imprints on the…
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