4.4 Article

Maximum baryon masses for static neutron stars in f(R) gravity

Journal

EPL
Volume 136, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1209/0295-5075/ac3d6c

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. MINECO (Spain) [PID2019-104397GB-I00]
  2. Ministry of Education and Science (Russia) [07502-2021-1748]
  3. INFN
  4. Sezione di Napoli
  5. iniziative specifiche MOONLIGHT2
  6. QGSKY

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigates the upper mass limit predictions of baryonic mass for static neutron stars in the context of f (R) gravity, focusing on the R-2 gravity model. The results show that most equations of state studied have baryon masses near the lower limits of the mass gap region, with the highest maximum baryon mass found to be around 3 times the solar mass. The analysis suggests that the gravitational mass of static neutron stars cannot exceed three solar masses, while the lower mass limits of astrophysical black holes are likely to be in the range of 2.5-3 solar masses, supporting the claim that neutron stars cannot have gravitational masses larger than 3 solar masses in the context of R-2 gravity.
We investigate the upper mass limit predictions of the baryonic mass for static neutron stars in the context of f (R) gravity. We use the most popular f (R) gravity model, namely the R-2 gravity, and calculate the maximum baryon mass of static neutron stars adopting several realistic equations of state and one ideal equation of state, namely that of causal limit. Our motivation is based on the fact that neutron stars with baryon masses larger than the maximum mass for static neutron star configurations inevitably collapse to black holes. Thus with our analysis, we want further to enlighten the predictions for the maximum baryon masses of static neutron stars in R-2 gravity, which, in turn, further strengthens our understanding of the mysterious mass gap region. As we show, the baryon masses of most of the equations of states studied in this paper lie in the lower limits of the mass gap region M similar to 2.5-5M(circle dot), but intriguingly enough, the highest value of the maximum baryon masses we found is of the order of M similar to 3M(circle dot). This upper mass limit also appears as a maximum static neutron star gravitational mass limit in other contexts. Combining the two results which refer to baryon and gravitational masses, we point out that the gravitational mass of static neutron stars cannot be larger than three solar masses, while based on maximum baryon masses results of the present work, we can conspicuously state that it is highly likely the lower mass limits of astrophysical black holes in the range of M similar to 2.5-3M(circle dot). This, in turn, implies that maximum neutron star masses in the context of R-2 gravity are likely to be in the lower limits of the range of M similar to 2.4-3M(circle dot). Hence our work further supports the General Relativity claim that neutron stars cannot have gravitational masses larger than 3M(circle dot) and then, to explain observations comparable or over this limit, we need alternative extensions of General Relativity, other than f (R) gravity. Copyright (C) 2022 EPLA

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available