Venue: Physics
Building, Max-von-Laue-Str. 1, Seminar Room PHYS 2.116
Time: Thursday, August 02, 4:30pm (s.t.)
Contact: hees@th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de
The recent observation of the first neutron star merger, both across
the electromagnetic spectrum and in gravitational waves, heralds the era
of gravitational wave astronomy. Inferring the properties and
composition of dense matter is one of the most exciting applications of
this emerging area of science. Continuous gravitational wave sources
have the potential to provide even more detailed insight into the
properties of dense matter. We discuss how the present non-detection of
a continuous gravitational wave signal from compact sources as well as
additional multi-messenger observations already constrain their interior
composition through r-mode astroseismology. We show that the standard
model of a neutron star, made of conventional neutron matter, is
strongly challenged since it cannot provide the dissipation required to
explain the astrophysical data.