Constraining Hadron-quark Phase Transition Parameters within the Quark-mean-field Model Using Multimessenger Observations of Neutron Stars

We extend the quark mean-field (QMF) model for nuclear matter and study the possible presence of quark matter inside the cores of neutron stars. A sharp first-order hadron-quark phase transition is implemented combining the QMF for the hadronic phase with "constant-speed-of-sound" paramete...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2020-12, Vol.904 (2), p.103
Hauptverfasser: Miao, Zhiqiang, Li, Ang, Zhu, Zhenyu, Han, Sophia
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We extend the quark mean-field (QMF) model for nuclear matter and study the possible presence of quark matter inside the cores of neutron stars. A sharp first-order hadron-quark phase transition is implemented combining the QMF for the hadronic phase with "constant-speed-of-sound" parameterization for the high-density quark phase. The interplay of the nuclear symmetry energy slope parameter, L, and the dimensionless phase transition parameters (the transition density ntrans/n0, the transition strength Δ / trans, and the sound speed squared in quark matter ) are then systematically explored for the hybrid star properties, especially the maximum mass Mmax and the radius and the tidal deformability of a typical 1.4 M star. We show the strong correlation between the symmetry energy slope L and the typical stellar radius R1.4, similar to that previously found for neutron stars without a phase transition. With the inclusion of phase transition, we obtain robust limits on the maximum mass (Mmax < 3.6 M ) and the radius of 1.4 M stars (R1.4 9.6 km), and we find that a phase transition that is too weak (Δ / trans 0.2) taking place at low densities 1.3-1.5 n0 is strongly disfavored. We also demonstrate that future measurements of the radius and tidal deformability of ∼1.4 M stars, as well as the mass measurement of very massive pulsars, can help reveal the presence and amount of quark matter in compact objects.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.3847/1538-4357/abbd41