Impacts of {$f(R, T)$} gravity on neutron stars study within the relativistic mean-field model framework in light of GW170817, Pulsars and NICER data
Premachand Mahapatra, Prasanta Kumar Das

TL;DR
This study explores how $f(R,T)$ gravity influences neutron star properties using realistic equations of state, constrained by multimessenger astrophysical data, revealing the interplay between gravity modifications and dense matter physics.
Contribution
It demonstrates the effects of $f(R,T)$ gravity on neutron star structure with realistic EOSs, constrained by recent multimessenger observations, highlighting the importance of realistic matter models.
Findings
Density-dependent EOSs satisfy observational constraints within certain $mbda$ ranges.
Nonlinear EOSs fail to meet radius and tidal deformability bounds despite large maximum masses.
Maximum neutron star mass is highly sensitive to matter--geometry coupling and EOS degeneracy.
Abstract
In this work, we investigate the neutron star structure in conservative gravity with , where denotes the matter--geometry coupling. The modified stellar structure equations are solved using realistic relativistic mean-field (RMF) equations of state (EOSs), including density-dependent linear models and nonlinear interacting models with meson self-couplings. Theoretical predictions are confronted with multimessenger constraints from heavy pulsars, NICER radius measurements, and GW170817 tidal deformability, imposing and to constrain both the EOS parameter space and . We find that density-dependent EOSs such as DDH and TW satisfy all observational constraints for specific ranges, while nonlinear EOSs (NL3, GM1, TM1), despite large maximum…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · High-pressure geophysics and materials
