713 research outputs found

    Hierarchical triple mergers: testing Hawking's area theorem with the inspiral signals

    Full text link
    Hawking's area theorem is one of the fundamental laws of black holes (BHs), which has been tested at a confidence level of ∼95%\sim 95\% with gravitational wave (GW) observations by analyzing the inspiral and ringdown portions of GW signals independently. In this work, we propose to carry out the test in a new way with the hierarchical triple merger (i.e., two successive BH mergers occurred sequentially within the observation window of GW detectors), for which the properties of the progenitor BHs and the remnant BH of the first coalescence can be reliably inferred from the inspiral portions of the two mergers. As revealed in our simulation, a test of the BH area law can be achieved at the significance level of ≳3σ\gtrsim 3\sigma for the hierarchical triple merger events detected in LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA's O4/O5 runs. If the hierarchical triple mergers contribute a ≳0.1%\gtrsim 0.1\% fraction to the detected BBHs, a precision test of the BH area law with such systems is achievable in the near future. Our method also provides an additional criterion to establish the hierarchical triple merger origin of some candidate events.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl

    Maximum gravitational mass MTOV=2.25−0.07+0.08M⊙M_{\rm TOV}=2.25^{+0.08}_{-0.07}M_\odot inferred at about 3%3\% precision with multimessenger data of neutron stars

    Full text link
    The maximal gravitational mass of nonrotating neutron stars (MTOVM_{\rm TOV}) is one of the key parameters of compact objects and only loose bounds can be set based on the first principle. With reliable measurements of the masses and/or radii of the neutron stars, MTOVM_{\rm TOV} can be robustly inferred from either the mass distribution of these objects or the reconstruction of the equation of state (EoS) of the very dense matter. For the first time we take the advantages of both two approaches to have a precise inference of MTOV=2.25−0.07+0.08 M⊙M_{\rm TOV}=2.25^{+0.08}_{-0.07}~M_\odot (68.3% credibility), with the updated neutron star mass measurement sample, the mass-tidal deformability data of GW170817, the mass-radius data of PSR J0030+0451 and PSR J0740+6620, as well as the theoretical information from the chiral effective theory (χ\chiEFT) and perturbative quantum chromodynamics (pQCD) at low and very high energy densities, respectively. This narrow credible range is benefited from the suppression of the high MTOVM_{\rm TOV} by the pQCD constraint and the exclusion of the low MTOVM_{\rm TOV} by the mass function. Three different EoS reconstruction methods are adopted separately, and the resulting MTOVM_{\rm TOV} are found to be almost identical. This precisely evaluated MTOVM_{\rm TOV} suggests that the EoS of neutron star matter is just moderately stiff and the ∼2.5−3M⊙\sim 2.5-3M_\odot compact objects detected by the second generation gravitational wave detectors are most likely the lightest black holes.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure

    In Situ Monitoring of Temperature inside Lithium-Ion Batteries by Flexible Micro Temperature Sensors

    Get PDF
    Lithium-ion secondary batteries are commonly used in electric vehicles, smart phones, personal digital assistants (PDA), notebooks and electric cars. These lithium-ion secondary batteries must charge and discharge rapidly, causing the interior temperature to rise quickly, raising a safety issue. Over-charging results in an unstable voltage and current, causing potential safety problems, such as thermal runaways and explosions. Thus, a micro flexible temperature sensor for the in in-situ monitoring of temperature inside a lithium-ion secondary battery must be developed. In this work, flexible micro temperature sensors were integrated into a lithium-ion secondary battery using the micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) process for monitoring temperature in situ

    Statistical Origin of Constituent-Quark Scaling in the QGP hadronization

    Full text link
    Nonextensive statistics in a Blast-Wave model (TBW) is implemented to describe the identified hadron production in relativistic p+p and nucleus-nucleus collisions. Incorporating the core and corona components within the TBW formalism allows us to describe simultaneously some of the major observations in hadronic observables at the Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider (RHIC): the Number of Constituent Quark Scaling (NCQ), the large radial and elliptic flow, the effect of gluon saturation and the suppression of hadron production at high transverse momentum (pT) due to jet quenching. In this formalism, the NCQ scaling at RHIC appears as a consequence of non-equilibrium process. Our study also provides concise reference distributions with a least chi2 fit of the available experimental data for future experiments and models.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; added two tables, explained a little bit more on TBW_p
    • …
    corecore