Interface modes in inspiralling neutron stars: A gravitational-wave probe of first-order phase transitions

Abstract

At the extreme densities in neutron stars, a phase transition to deconfined quark matter is anticipated. Yet masses, radii, and tidal deformabilities offer only indirect measures of a first-order phase transition, requiring many detections to resolve or being ineffective observables if the discontinuity exists at lower densities. We report on a smoking-gun gravitational-wave signature of a first-order transition: the resonant tidal excitation of an interface mode. Using relativistic perturbation theory with an equation-of-state family informed by chiral effective field theory, we show that such a resonance may be detectable with next-generation interferometers and possibly already with LIGO A+ for sufficiently loud events

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    Southampton (e-Prints Soton)

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    Last time updated on 01/12/2025

    This paper was published in Southampton (e-Prints Soton).

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