Resonant Conversion of Gravitational Waves in Neutron Star Magnetospheres
Jamie I. McDonald, Sebastian A. R. Ellis

TL;DR
This paper investigates the resonant conversion of high-frequency gravitational waves into photons in neutron star magnetospheres, setting new constraints on gravitational wave backgrounds using X-ray, IR, and JWST observations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to constrain high-frequency gravitational waves via resonant conversion in neutron star magnetospheres, providing stronger limits than previous constraints.
Findings
Set strain limits $h_c^{ m lim} \, \simeq 10^{-26} - 10^{-24}$ in the frequency range $5\times 10^{17}$ to $2\times 10^{19}$ Hz.
Established a limit $h_{ m c}^{ m lim} \simeq 5 \times 10^{-19}$ in the $2.7\times 10^{13}$ to $5.9\times 10^{13}$ Hz range.
Limits are many orders of magnitude stronger than existing constraints from individual neutron stars.
Abstract
High frequency gravitational waves are the subject of rapidly growing interest in the theoretical and experimental community. In this work we calculate the resonant conversion of gravitational waves into photons in the magnetospheres of neutron stars via the inverse Gertsenshtein mechanism. The resonance occurs in regions where the vacuum birefringence effects cancel the classical plasma contribution to the photon dispersion relation, leading to a massless photon in the medium which becomes kinematically matched to the graviton. We set limits on the amplitude of a possible stochastic background of gravitational waves using X-ray and IR flux measurements of neutron stars. Using Chandra () and NuSTAR () observations of RX J1856.6-3754, we set strain limits in the frequency range $ 5\times 10^{17}\, {\rm Hz}…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Sensor Technology · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Earthquake Detection and Analysis
