Constraints on the Symmetry Energy from PREX-II in the Multimessenger Era
Abstract
The neutron skin thickness rnp of heavy nuclei is essentially determined by the symmetry energy density slope L( ) at c = 0.11~ fm-3≈ 2/30 (0 is nuclear saturation density), roughly corresponding to the average density of finite nuclei. The PREX collaboration recently reported a model-independent extraction of r208np = 0.283 0.071 fm for the rnp of 208Pb, suggesting a rather stiff symmetry energy Esym( ) with L(c ) 52 MeV. We show that the Esym( ) cannot be too stiff and L(c ) 73 MeV is necessary to be compatible with (1) the ground-state properties and giant monopole resonances of finite nuclei, (2) the constraints on the equation of state of symmetric nuclear matter at suprasaturation densities from flow data in heavy-ion collisions, (3) the largest neutron star (NS) mass reported so far for PSR J0740+6620, (4) the NS tidal deformability extracted from gravitational wave signal GW170817 and (5) the mass-radius of PSR J0030+045 measured simultaneously by NICER. This allows us to obtain 52 L(c ) 73 MeV and 0.212 r208np 0.271 fm, and further Esym(0 ) = 34.3 1.7 MeV, L(0 ) = 83.1 24.7 MeV, and Esym(20 ) = 62.8 15.9 MeV. A number of critical implications on nuclear physics and astrophysics are discussed.
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