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Using the very recently reported mass $2.14^{+0.10}_{-0.09}M_odot$ of PSR J0740+6620 together with the data of finite nuclei and the constraints on the equation of state of symmetric nuclear matter at suprasaturation densities from flow data in heavy-ion collisions, we show that the symmetry energy $E_{rm sym}(n)$ cannot be supersoft so that it becomes negative at suprasaturation densities in neutron stars (NSs) and thus may make the NS have a pure neutron matter core. This is in contrast to the fact that using the mass $2.01 pm 0.04 M_odot$ of PSR J0348+0432 as the NS maximum mass cannot rule out the supersoft high-density $E_{rm sym}(n)$. Furthermore, we find the stiffer high-density $E_{rm sym}(n)$ based on the existence of $2.14M_odot$ NSs leads to a strong constraint of $Lambda_{1.4} ge 348^{+88}_{-51}$ for the dimensionless tidal deformability of the canonical $1.4M_odot$ NS.
By directly inverting several neutron star observables in the three-dimensional parameter space for the Equation of State of super-dense neutron-rich nuclear matter, we show that the lower radius limit for PSR J0740+6620 of mass $2.08pm 0.07~M_{odot}
Recently, the radius of neutron star (NS) PSR J0740+6620 was measured by NICER and an updated measurement of neutron skin thickness of ${}^{208}$Pb ($R_{rm skin}^{208}$) was reported by the PREX-II experiment. These new measurements can help us bette
We report results from continued timing observations of PSR J0740+6620, a high-mass, 2.8-ms radio pulsar in orbit with a likely ultra-cool white dwarf companion. Our data set consists of combined pulse arrival-time measurements made with the 100-m Gr
X-ray pulse profile modeling of PSR J0740+6620, the most massive known pulsar, with data from the NICER and XMM-Newton observatories recently led to a measurement of its radius. We investigate this measurements implications for the neutron star equat
The spinodal instabilities in hot asymmetric nuclear matter and some important critical parameters derived thereof are studied using six different families of relativistic mean-field (RMF) models. The slopes of the symmetry energy coefficient vary ov