Atmospheric Effects on Neutron Star Parameter Constraints with NICER
Tuomo Salmi, Serena Vinciguerra, Devarshi Choudhury, Anna L. Watts,, Wynn C. G. Ho, Sebastien Guillot, Yves Kini, Bas Dorsman, Sharon M. Morsink,, Slavko Bogdanov

TL;DR
This study investigates how uncertainties in neutron star atmosphere models affect the constraints on neutron star parameters derived from NICER X-ray observations, finding that composition and ionization state can significantly influence radius estimates.
Contribution
The paper extends previous atmosphere modeling to include partially ionized carbon and empirical beaming, assessing their impact on neutron star parameter inference from NICER data.
Findings
Atmosphere composition and ionization state can significantly alter radius estimates.
Partially ionized hydrogen and carbon atmospheres are disfavored based on data evidence.
External heating and beaming deviations have negligible effects on inferred radius.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the effects of uncertainties in the atmosphere models on the radius, mass, and other neutron star parameter constraints for the NICER observations of rotation-powered millisecond pulsars. To date, NICER has applied the X-ray pulse profile modeling technique to two millisecond-period pulsars: PSR J0030+0451 and the high-mass pulsar PSR J0740+6620. These studies have commonly assumed a deep-heated, fully ionized hydrogen atmosphere model, although they have explored the effects of partial-ionization and helium composition in some cases. Here, we extend that exploration and also include new models with partially ionized carbon composition, externally heated hydrogen, and an empirical atmospheric beaming parameterization to explore deviations in the expected anisotropy of the emitted radiation. None of the studied atmosphere cases have any significant influence on…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
