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Confronting GW190814 with hyperonization in dense matter and hypernuclear compact stars

Armen Sedrakian, Fridolin Weber, and Jia Jie Li
Phys. Rev. D 102, 041301(R) – Published 18 August 2020

Abstract

We examine the possibility that the light companion in the highly asymmetric binary compact object coalescence event GW190814 is a hypernuclear star. We use density functional theory with functionals that have been tuned to the properties of Λ hypernuclei as well as astrophysical constraints placed by the masses of the most massive millisecond pulsars, the mass-radius range inferred from the NICER experiment, and the binary neutron star merger event GW170817. We compute general-relativistic static and maximally rotating Keplerian configurations of purely nucleonic and hypernuclear stars. We find that while nucleonic stars are broadly consistent with a neutron star being involved in GW190814, this would imply no new degrees of freedom in the dense matter up to 6.5 times the nuclear saturation density. Allowing for hyperonization of dense matter, we find that the maximal masses of hypernuclear stars, even for maximal rapidly rotating configurations, are inconsistent with a stellar nature interpretation of the light companion in GW190814, implying that this event involved two black holes rather than a neutron star and a black hole.

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  • Received 17 July 2020
  • Accepted 28 July 2020

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.102.041301

© 2020 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Gravitation, Cosmology & Astrophysics

Authors & Affiliations

Armen Sedrakian1,2,*, Fridolin Weber3,4,†, and Jia Jie Li5

  • 1Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies, D-60438 Frankfurt-Main, Germany
  • 2Institute of Theoretical Physics, University of Wrocław, 50-204 Wrocław, Poland
  • 3Department of Physics, San Diego State University, San Diego, California 92182, USA
  • 4Center for Astrophysics and Space Sciences, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USA
  • 5Institute for Theoretical Physics, J. W. Goethe University, D-60438 Frankfurt am Main, Germany

  • *sedrakian@fias.uni-frankfurt.de
  • fweber@sdsu.edu,fweber@ucsd.edu

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Vol. 102, Iss. 4 — 15 August 2020

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