ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Two low mass neutron stars, J0737-3039B and the companion to J1756-2251, show strong evidence of being formed from the collapse of an ONeMg core in an electron capture supernova (ECSN) or in an ultra-stripped iron core collapse supernova (FeCCSN). Using three different systematically generated sets of equations of state we explore the relationship between the moment of inertia of J0737-3039A and the binding energy of the two low mass neutron stars. We find this relationship, a less strict variant of the recently discovered I-Love-Q relations, is nevertheless more robust than a previously explored correlation between the binding energy and the slope of the nuclear symmetry energy L. We find that, if either J0737-3039B or the J1756-2251 companion were formed in an ECSN, no more than 0.06 solar masses could have been lost from the progenitor core, more than four times the mass loss predicted by current supernova modeling. A measurement of the moment of inertia of J0737-3039A to within 10% accuracy from pulsar timing, possible within a decade, can discriminate between formation scenarios such as ECSN or ultra-stripped FeCCSN and, given current constraints on the predicted core mass loss, potentially rule them out. Using the I-Love-Q relations we find that an Advanced LIGO can potentially measure the neutron star tidal polarizability to equivalent accuracy in a neutron star-neutron star merger at a distance of 200 Mpc, thus obtaining similar constraints on the formation scenarios. Such information on the occurrence of ECSNe is important for population synthesis calculations, especially for estimating the rate of binary neutron star mergers and resulting electromagnetic and gravitational wave signals. Further progress needs to be made modeling the core collapse process that leads to low-mass neutron stars, particularly in making robust predictions for the mass loss from the progenitor core.
A precise moment of inertia measurement for PSR J0737-3039A in the double pulsar system is expected within the next five years. We present here a new method of mapping the anticipated measurement of the moment of inertia directly into the neutron sta
Heavy elements like gold, platinum or uranium are produced in the r-process, which needs neutron-rich and explosive environments. Neutron star mergers are a promising candidate for an r-process site. They exhibit three different channels for matter e
The rapid-neutron-capture (r) process is responsible for synthesizing many of the heavy elements observed in both the solar system and Galactic metal-poor halo stars. Simulations of r-process nucleosynthesis can reproduce abundances derived from obse
We study the evolution of close binary systems in order to account for the existence of the recently observed binary system containing the most massive millisecond pulsar ever detected, PSR J0740+6620, and its ultra-cool helium white dwarf companion.
Double neutron star (DNS) systems represent extreme physical objects and the endpoint of an exotic journey of stellar evolution and binary interactions. Large numbers of DNS systems and their mergers are anticipated to be discovered using the Square-