Maximum gravitational mass $M_{\rm TOV}=2.25^{+0.08}_{-0.07}M_\odot$ inferred at about $3\%$ precision with multimessenger data of neutron stars
Yi-Zhong Fan, Ming-Zhe Han, Jin-Liang Jiang, Dong-Sheng Shao, and Shao-Peng Tang

TL;DR
This study combines multiple observational and theoretical data sources to precisely determine the maximum gravitational mass of nonrotating neutron stars as approximately 2.25 solar masses, with implications for the neutron star equation of state and black hole formation.
Contribution
First to integrate multimessenger data and theoretical constraints to accurately infer the maximum neutron star mass with about 3% precision.
Findings
Maximum neutron star mass $M_{TOV}$ is $2.25^{+0.08}_{-0.07} M_\odot$
Radius of the most massive neutron star is $11.90^{+0.63}_{-0.60}$ km
Neutron star EoS is moderately stiff, and objects of 2.5-3 solar masses are likely lightest black holes.
Abstract
The maximal gravitational mass of nonrotating neutron stars () is one of the key parameters of compact objects and only loose bounds can be set based on the first principle. With reliable measurements of the masses and/or radii of the neutron stars, can be robustly inferred from either the mass distribution of these objects or the reconstruction of the equation of state (EoS) of the very dense matter. For the first time we take the advantages of both two approaches to have a precise inference of (68.3\% credibility), with the updated neutron star mass measurement sample, the mass-tidal deformability data of GW170817, the mass-radius data of PSR J0030+0451 and PSR J0740+6620, as well as the theoretical information from the chiral effective theory (EFT) and perturbative quantum chromodynamics (pQCD) at low and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
