English

Nuclear limits on gravitational waves from elliptically deformed pulsars

Astrophysics 2014-11-18 v2 Nuclear Experiment Nuclear Theory

Abstract

Gravitational radiation is a fundamental prediction of General Relativity. Elliptically deformed pulsars are among the possible sources emitting gravitational waves (GWs) with a strain-amplitude dependent upon the star's quadrupole moment, rotational frequency, and distance from the detector. We show that the gravitational wave strain amplitude h0h_0 depends strongly on the equation of state of neutron-rich stellar matter. Applying an equation of state with symmetry energy constrained by recent nuclear laboratory data, we set an upper limit on the strain-amplitude of GWs produced by elliptically deformed pulsars. Depending on details of the EOS, for several millisecond pulsars at distances 0.18kpc0.18kpc to 0.35kpc0.35kpc from Earth, the {\it maximal} h0h_0 is found to be in the range of [0.41.5]×1024\sim[0.4-1.5]\times 10^{-24}. This prediction serves as the first {\it direct} nuclear constraint on the gravitational radiation. Its implications are discussed.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0805.1973,
  title  = {Nuclear limits on gravitational waves from elliptically deformed pulsars},
  author = {Plamen G. Krastev and Bao-An Li and Aaron Worley},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0805.1973},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

13 pages, 5 figures, and 2 Table. Accepted for publication in Physics Letters B

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