What constraints can one pose on the maximum mass of neutron stars from multi-messenger observations?
Shunke Ai, He Gao, Yong Yuan, Bing Zhang, Lin Lan

TL;DR
This paper combines multi-messenger observations, gravitational wave data, and electromagnetic signals to statistically constrain the maximum mass of neutron stars, providing a refined estimate around 2.5 solar masses.
Contribution
It introduces a novel Monte Carlo approach integrating various observational constraints to estimate the neutron star maximum mass with quantified uncertainties.
Findings
Estimated M_TOV around 2.49-2.52 solar masses.
Constraints derived from specific BNS merger events.
Probabilistic distribution of M_TOV with confidence intervals.
Abstract
The maximum mass of neutron stars () plays a crucial role in understanding their equation of state (EoS). Previous studies have used the measurements for the compactness of massive pulsars and the tidal deformability of neutron stars in binary neutron star (BNS) mergers to constrain the EoS and thus the . The discovery of the most massive pulsar, PSR J0952-0607, with a mass , has provided a valuable lower limit for . Another efficient method to constrain is by examining the type of central remnant formed after a BNS merger. Gravitational wave (GW) data can provide the total mass of the system, while accompanying electromagnetic signals can help infer the remnant type. In this study, we combine all the previous constraints and utilize the observational facts that about of the short gamma-ray bursts are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
