One-arm Spiral Instability in Hypermassive Neutron Stars Formed by Dynamical-Capture Binary Neutron Star Mergers

ORAL

Abstract

Using general-relativistic hydrodynamical simulations, we show that merging binary neutron stars can form hypermassive neutrons stars that undergo the one-arm spiral instability. We study the particular case of a dynamical capture merger where the stars have a small spin, as may arise in globular clusters, and focus on an equal-mass scenario where the spins are aligned with the orbital angular momentum. We find that this instability develops when post-merger fluid vortices lead to the generation of a toroidal remnant -- a configuration whose maximum density occurs in a ring around the center-of-mass -- with high vorticity along its rotation axis. The instability quickly saturates on a timescale of $\sim 10$ ms, with the $m=1$ azimuthal density multipole mode dominating over higher modes. The instability also leaves a characteristic imprint on the post-merger gravitational wave signal that could be detectable if the instability persists in long-lived remnants.

*This work was supported by the Simons Foundation and NSF grants PHY-1305682, PHY-1300903, and NASA grant NNX13AH44G. Computational resources were provided by XSEDE/TACC under grants TG-PHY100053, TG-MCA99S008, and the Orbital cluster at Princeton Univers

Authors

  • Vasileios Paschalidis

    • Princeton University
  • William E. East

    • KIPAC, Stanford University
    • KIPAC, Stanford University, SLAC
  • Frans Pretorius

    • Princeton University
  • Stuart L. Shapiro

    • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign