May 29, 2023 to June 2, 2023
Santander (Spain)
Europe/Madrid timezone

Probing dark matter with neutron stars and their mergers

May 31, 2023, 3:50 PM
20m
Astrophysics Astrophysics

Speaker

Violetta Sagun (University of Coimbra)

Description

Compact stars due to their enormous gravitational field can accumulate a sizable amount of dark matter in their interior. Depending on its nature, accumulated dark matter may affect the properties of neutron stars in quite different ways. I will give an overview of the impact of dark matter on various observable properties of neutron stars, i.e. the mass-radius relation, tidal deformability, merger dynamics, gravitational waveform, etc. For two scenarios, asymmetric fermionic and bosonic dark matter, the conditions at which dark matter particles tend to condensate in the core of the star or create an extended halo will be presented. I will show how dark matter condensed in a core tends to decrease the total gravitational mass and tidal deformability compared to a pure baryonic star, which appears as an effective softening of the equation of state. On the other hand, the presence of a dark matter halo has an opposite effect, causing an increase of those observable quantities. Thus, observational data on compact stars could be affected by accumulated dark matter and, consequently, constraints we put on the strongly interacting matter at high densities.

In addition, I will present the numerical-relativity simulations of compact stars admixed with a dark matter component. We perform single star tests as well as the first binary neutron star simulations of this kind. I will discuss how the ongoing and future x-ray, radio, and gravitational wave observations could shed light on dark matter admixed compact stars and put multi-messenger constraints on the corresponding effect.

Author

Violetta Sagun (University of Coimbra)

Co-authors

Prof. Constança Providência (University of Coimbra) Edoardo Giangrandi (University of Coimbra) Dr Hannes Rüter (IST, Univesity of Lisbon) Dr Oleksii Ivanytskyi (University of Wroclaw) Prof. Tim Dietrich (University of Potsdam and Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics Potsdam)

Presentation materials