Using Equation of State Constraints to Classify Low-Mass Compact Binary Mergers
Jacob Golomb, Isaac Legred, Katerina Chatziioannou, Adrian Abac, Tim Dietrich

TL;DR
This paper proposes a method using combined mass and tidal effects to classify low-mass compact binary mergers as black holes or neutron stars, especially in the uncertain low-mass range, with implications for gravitational wave observations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach that leverages tidal deformation and equation of state constraints to classify low-mass compact objects in gravitational wave data, extending beyond mass-based classification.
Findings
Sub-solar mass neutron stars can be identified with high confidence.
Presence of a black hole can be established with odds ~100:1 in certain mergers.
Classifying individual binary components remains inherently ambiguous.
Abstract
Compact objects observed via gravitational waves are classified as black holes or neutron stars primarily based on their inferred mass with respect to stellar evolution expectations. However, astrophysical expectations for the lowest mass range, , are uncertain. If such low-mass compact objects exist, ground-based gravitational wave detectors may observe them in binary mergers. Lacking astrophysical expectations for classifying such observations, we go beyond the mass and explore the role of tidal effects. We evaluate how combined mass and tidal inference can inform whether each binary component is a black hole or a neutron star based on consistency with the supranuclear-density equation of state. Low-mass neutron stars experience a large tidal deformation; its observational identification (or lack thereof) can therefore aid in determining the nature of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
