The Thermal Index of Neutron-star Matter in the Virial Approximation

Motivated by gravitational-wave observations of binary neutron-star mergers, we study the thermal index of low-density, high-temperature dense matter. We use the virial expansion to account for nuclear interaction effects. We focus on the region of validity of the expansion, which reaches 10 ^−3 fm...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Giuseppe Rivieccio, Adriana Nadal-Matosas, Arnau Rios, Milton Ruiz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2025-01-01
Series:The Astrophysical Journal
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/add3ed
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Summary:Motivated by gravitational-wave observations of binary neutron-star mergers, we study the thermal index of low-density, high-temperature dense matter. We use the virial expansion to account for nuclear interaction effects. We focus on the region of validity of the expansion, which reaches 10 ^−3 fm ^−3 at T = 5 MeV up to almost saturation density at T = 50 MeV. In pure neutron matter, we find an analytical expression for the thermal index, and show that it is nearly density and temperature independent, within a fraction of a percent of the noninteracting, nonrelativistic value of Γ _th  ≈ 5/3. When we incorporate protons, electrons, and photons, we find that the density and temperature dependence of the thermal index changes significantly. We predict a smooth transition between an electron-dominated regime with Γ _th  ≈ 4/3 at low densities to a neutron-dominated region with Γ _th  ≈ 5/3 at high densities. This behavior is by and large independent of the proton fraction and is not affected by nuclear interactions in the region where the virial expansion converges. We model this smooth transition analytically and provide a simple but accurate parameterization of the inflection point between these regimes. When compared to tabulated realistic models of the thermal index, we find an overall agreement at high temperatures that weakens for colder matter. The discrepancies can be attributed to the missing contributions of nuclear clusters. The virial approximation provides a clear and physically intuitive framework for understanding the thermal properties of dense matter, offering a computationally efficient solution that makes it particularly well suited for the regimes relevant to neutron-star binary remnants.
ISSN:1538-4357