4.7 Article

Properties of Neutron Stars Described by a Relativistic Ab Initio Model

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 897, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ab994b

Keywords

Neutron stars; Gravitational waves; Nuclear physics; Neutron star cores

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11775119, 11675083, 11405116]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin
  3. China Scholarship Council [201906205013, 201906255002]

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Properties of neutron stars are investigated by an available relativistic ab initio method, the relativistic Brueckner-Hartree-Fock (RBHF) model, with the latest high-precision, relativistic charge-dependent potentials, pvCD-Bonn A, B, C. The neutron star matter is solved within the beta equilibrium and charge neutrality conditions in the framework of the RBHF model. Compared to the conventional treatment, where the chemical potential of leptons was approximately represented by the symmetry energy of nuclear matter, the equation of state of neutron star matter in the present self-consistent calculation with pvCD-Bonn B has a striking difference above the baryon number densityn(b) = 0.55 fm(-3). However, these differences influence the global properties of neutron stars only about 1% to 2%. Then, three two-body potentials pvCD-Bonn A, B, C, with different tensor components, are systematically applied in the RBHF model to calculate the properties of neutron stars. It is found that the maximum masses of neutron stars are around 2.21-2.30M, and the corresponding radii areR = 11.18-11.72 km. The radii of a 1.4Mneutron star are predicated asR(1.4) = 12.34-12.91 km, and their dimensionless tidal deformabilities are ?(1.4) = 485-626. Furthermore, the direct URCA process in neutron star cooling will happen fromn(b) = 0.414 to 0.530 fm(-3)with the proton fractionsY(p) = 0.136-0.138. All of the results obtained from the RBHF model only with two-body pvCD-Bonn potentials completely satisfy various constraints from recent astronomical observations of massive neutron stars, gravitational wave detection (GW170817), and simultaneous mass-radius measurement.

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