Constraining the dense matter equation of state with new NICER mass-radius measurements and new chiral effective field theory inputs
Nathan Rutherford, Melissa Mendes, Isak Svensson, Achim Schwenk, Anna, L. Watts, Kai Hebeler, Jonas Keller, Chanda Prescod-Weinstein, Devarshi, Choudhury, Geert Raaijmakers, Tuomo Salmi, Patrick Timmerman, Serena, Vinciguerra, Sebastien Guillot, James M. Lattimer

TL;DR
This paper combines new NICER mass-radius measurements, updated neutron star data, and chiral effective field theory inputs to refine the dense matter equation of state, constraining neutron star radii and maximum masses with two EOS models.
Contribution
It introduces new observational data and theoretical inputs to improve constraints on the neutron star equation of state using two different high-density models.
Findings
Neutron star radius for 1.4 M_sun constrained to ~12.3 km
Maximum neutron star mass predicted around 2.1 M_sun
EOS models show sensitivity to chiral EFT order and density range
Abstract
Pulse profile modeling of X-ray data from NICER is now enabling precision inference of neutron star mass and radius. Combined with nuclear physics constraints from chiral effective field theory (EFT), and masses and tidal deformabilities inferred from gravitational wave detections of binary neutron star mergers, this has lead to a steady improvement in our understanding of the dense matter equation of state (EOS). Here we consider the impact of several new results: the radius measurement for the 1.42 pulsar PSR J04374715 presented by Choudhury et al. (2024), updates to the masses and radii of PSR J07406620 and PSR J00300451, and new EFT results for neutron star matter up to 1.5 times nuclear saturation density. Using two different high-density EOS extensions -- a piecewise-polytropic (PP) model and a model based on the speed of sound in a neutron star…
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