Tidal deformations of general-relativistic multifluid compact stars

Avatar
Poster
Voice is AI-generated
Connected to paperThis paper is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review

Tidal deformations of general-relativistic multifluid compact stars

Authors

Ethan Carlier, Nicolas Chamel

Abstract

Over the past decade, gravitational-wave astronomy has opened a new window onto the extreme states of matter inside compact stars. At some point during the inspiral of a binary system, each star starts to experience adiabatic tides, characterized by tidal deformabilities. The dominant tidal deformability, first measured with the GW170817 event, has already constrained the dense-matter equation of state. With the advent of third-generation detectors, tidal deformabilities are expected to be inferred with much higher precision, potentially revealing subleading tidal contributions. This motivates the development of more accurate compact-star models that incorporate richer microphysics. With this in mind, we move beyond the commonly adopted perfect-fluid approximation and model compact stars through a multifluid framework. In this work, we present the fully general-relativistic description of adiabatic tidal deformations of compact stars composed of an arbitrary number of interacting fluids, using Carter's multifluid variational formalism. A distinctive feature of this approach is the presence of nondissipative mutual entrainment between fluid species. We derive the hydrostatic equilibrium equations for multifluid configurations, along with the perturbed equations governing stationary gravitoelectric and gravitomagnetic tidal responses of arbitrary order. We then investigate how entrainment modifies the corresponding tidal deformabilities. Using an analytical representation of the multifluid equation of state, we show that entrainment leaves adiabatic tidal responses unchanged and therefore produces no measurable effect on the gravitational-wave signal emitted during the inspiral long before the excitation of internal mode resonances. We subsequently discuss two specific applications: superfluid neutron stars and dark matter admixed compact stars.

Follow Us on

0 comments

Add comment