Gravitational waves from newly born, hot neutron stars
read the original abstract
We study the gravitational radiation associated to the non--radial oscillations of newly born, hot neutron stars. The frequencies and damping times of the relevant quasi--normal modes are computed for two different models of proto--neutron stars, at different times of evolution, from its birth until it settles down as a cold neutron star. We find that the oscillation properties of proto--neutron stars are remarkably different from those of their cold, old descendants and that this affects the characteristic features of the gravitational signal emitted during the post-collapse evolution. The consequences on the observability of these signals by resonant--mass and interferometric detectors are analyzed. We find that gravitational waves from the pulsations of a newborn proto--neutron star in the galaxy could be detected with a signal to noise ratio of 5 by the first generation interferometers, if the energy stored in the modes is greater than $\sim 10^{-8} M_\odot c^2$, or by a resonant antenna if it is greater than $\sim 10^{-4} M_\odot c^2$. In addition since at early times the frequency of the spacetime modes is much lower than that of a cold neutron star, they would be also detectable with the same signal to noise ratio if a comparable amount of energy is radiated into these modes.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
Finite temperature effects on g-modes of inviscid neutron stars
The frequency of global core g-modes in warm neutron stars can be higher or lower than in cold stars depending on the nuclear symmetry energy slope L.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.