ABSTRACT
The electrical resistivity of the accreted mountain in a millisecond pulsar is limited by the observed spin-down rate of binary radio millisecond pulsars (BRMSPs) and the spins and X-ray fluxes of accreting millisecond pulsars (AMSPs). We find (where is the spin-down age) for BRMSPs and (where and are the actual and Eddington accretion rates) for AMSPs. These limits are inferred assuming that the mountain attains a steady state, where matter diffuses resistively across magnetic flux surfaces but is replenished at an equal rate by infalling material. The mountain then relaxes further resistively after accretion ceases. The BRMSP spin-down limit approaches the theoretical electron-impurity resistivity at temperatures ≳105 K for an impurity concentration of ∼0.1, while the AMSP stalling limit falls 2 orders of magnitude below the theoretical electron-phonon resistivity for temperatures above 108 K. Hence, BRMSP observations are already challenging theoretical resistivity calculations in a useful way. Next-generation gravitational-wave interferometers will constrain η at a level that will be competitive with electromagnetic observations.
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1. INTRODUCTION
Recent searches for periodic gravitational-wave signals from isolated (Abbott et al. 2007b; Wette et al. 2008; Abbott et al. 2008) and accreting (Abbott et al. 2007d; Watts et al. 2008) neutron stars with the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) have placed new upper limits on the mass quadrupole moments of these objects. In rare instances, the LIGO upper limit beats the indirect limit inferred from electromagnetic spin-down observations, e.g., the Crab's mass ellipticity is measured by LIGO to be ⩽ 1.8 × 10−4, approximately 25% of the indirect limit (Abbott et al. 2008). More often, the indirect limit beats the LIGO limit, e.g., for slowly decelerating radio millisecond pulsars (Abbott et al. 2007b).
As theoretical models for the quadrupole become more accurate and sophisticated, spin-down measurements and LIGO nondetections translate into stricter limits on the constitutive properties of a neutron star. For example, the quadrupole produced by electron-capture gradients requires a persistent lateral temperature difference of ∼5% at the base of the outer crust, and a normal rather than superfluid core, to be consistent with the gravitational-wave stalling interpretation of low-mass X-ray binary (LMXB) spins (Ushomirsky et al. 2000). The compressibility of nuclear matter must be lower than ∼200 MeV to explain the nondetection of a gravitational-wave signal from large pulsar glitches (van Eysden & Melatos 2008). The breaking strain of the crust is bounded above by the nondetection of a gravitational-wave signal from accreting neutron stars (Haskell et al. 2007; Watts et al. 2008; Horowitz & Kadau 2009).
In this paper, we show how the observed spin-down rates of binary radio millisecond pulsars (BRMSPs), and the spins and X-ray fluxes of accreting millisecond pulsars (AMSPs), translate into lower bounds on the electrical resistivity of an accreted neutron star crust. The bounds arise because the magnetically confined polar mountain formed during accretion (Payne & Melatos 2004; Melatos & Payne 2005) must relax resistively, until the quadrupole is low enough to respect the observational limits. Such an argument can be mounted now with rising confidence, because there have been substantial improvements recently in our understanding of the structure of magnetic mountains, including studies of ideal-magnetohydrodynamic (ideal-MHD) instabilities (Payne & Melatos 2006; Vigelius & Melatos 2008, 2009a), Ohmic diffusion (Vigelius & Melatos 2009b), realistic equations of state (Priymak et al. 2010), and hydrodynamic sinking into the non-rigid crust (Wette et al. 2010). The theory is now robust enough that its prediction of large ideal-MHD quadrupoles ( ∼ 10−5) deserves to be taken seriously. One must therefore appeal to nonideal processes, like resistive relaxation, to bring below ∼10−8, as the observational limits require.
The paper is set out as follows. In Section 2, magnetic mountain models are briefly reviewed, and an approximate formula is given for as a function of accreted mass, electrical resistivity, and age. The formula is applied to convert observations of BRMSP spin-down rates (Section 3) and AMSP spin frequencies (Section 4) into lower limits on the electrical resistivity, assuming energy conservation and gravitational-wave stalling, respectively. In Section 5, the limits are mapped onto a resistivity versus temperature plot and compared with the latest theoretical calculations of the electron-phonon and electron-impurity resistivities (Itoh & Kohyama 1993; Baiko & Yakovlev 1996; Cumming et al. 2001, 2004). The prospect of better limits from future LIGO experiments is canvassed briefly.
2. MAGNETIC MOUNTAIN QUADRUPOLE
The quadrupole generated by hydromagnetic stresses from the natal magnetic field of a neutron star (before accretion begins) is too small to emit gravitational waves at a level detectable in the spin down of MSPs or by LIGO. For dipolar fields in the range 1012 G ⩽B ⩽ 1013 G (Hartman et al. 1997; Arzoumanian et al. 2002; Faucher-Giguère & Kaspi 2006), one obtains h0 ≲ 10−30 for the gravitational-wave strain and Hz s−1 for the frequency spin-down rate (Bonazzola & Gourgoulhon 1996). A stochastic magnetic field in a type I superconducting core, or a strong toroidal field (≳1014 G), gives h0 ∼ 10−27 and Hz s−1 (Cutler 2002).
On the other hand, magnetic burial by accretion leads to a much larger quadrupole, as accreted material is funneled onto the polar cap. Payne & Melatos (2004) computed the unique, quasistatic sequence of ideal-MHD equilibria that describes how burial proceeds as a function of the total accreted mass Ma while self-consistently respecting the flux-freezing constraint.1 They found that the accreted matter is confined at the poles by an equatorial belt of compressed magnetic field anchored in the deep crust (Hameury et al. 1983; Brown & Bildsten 1998; Litwin et al. 2001). The resulting "magnetic mountain" has a substantial quadrupole moment, even after it relaxes hydromagnetically through the undular Parker instability. Expressed as a mass ellipticity , the final ideal-MHD quadrupole is given by Payne & Melatos (2004), Melatos & Payne (2005), Payne & Melatos (2006), Vigelius & Melatos (2009a), and Wette et al. (2010):
with Mc ≈ 2 × 10−5M☉. Numerical simulations, where a mountain is grown ab initio by mass injection, confirm the overall scaling for (with some extra oscillatory dynamics; Vigelius & Melatos 2009a).
Magnetic mountains relax resistively on the diffusive timescale, τd = 8.6 × 107 yr, after accretion switches off (Vigelius & Melatos 2009b). In a BRMSP, resistive relaxation proceeds roughly exponentially with
where measures the resistivity η in units of 1.3 × 10−27 s and t is the time elapsed since accretion stops (compare Figure 1 in Vigelius & Melatos (2009b)). In an AMSP, where accretion continues today, a steady state is established, where the influx of accreted material into a magnetic flux tube exactly replenishes the efflux due to Ohmic diffusion. The steady state is attained when the diffusion timescale equals the accretion timescale. As τd is directly proportional to η, the corresponding saturation ellipticity scales as (Brown & Bildsten 1998; Vigelius & Melatos 2009a)
where and are the actual and Eddington accretion rates, respectively.
Mountain relaxation is required by existing data. LMXBs should have been detected by LIGO already, if the quadrupole is as large as Equation (1) predicts (Vigelius & Melatos 2009a). Yet, directed searches have found nothing to date (Abbott et al. 2007d; Abbott et al. 2007a).
In general, the magnetic mountain axis is tilted with respect to the rotation axis. Hence, the star precesses,2 generating gravitational waves at f* and 2f*. The polarized wave strain is written down elsewhere (Zimmermann & Szedenits 1979; Jaranowski et al. 1998; Van Den Broeck 2005; Vigelius & Melatos 2009a). Its characteristic amplitude is
where Izz is the moment of inertia, f* is the spin frequency, D is the distance to the source, θ is the wobble angle, and i is the inclination angle of the line of sight. For small θ, we have F(θ, i) ∝ θ.
We combine from Equation (1) with the resistive decay prescriptions in this section and Equation (4) to derive limits on η in BRMSPs and AMSPs in Sections 3 and 4, respectively. Ideally, for both BRMSPs and AMSPs should be estimated by the same method, since every AMSP evolves into a BMRSP (Wijnands & van der Klis 1998; Alpar 2008). But we are prevented from making this connection because two crucial pieces of important information are missing: for BRMSPs and the age of AMSPs.
3. BINARY RADIO MILLISECOND PULSARS
3.1. Spin Down
If we attribute the loss of angular momentum observed in pulsar timing experiments to gravitational-wave emission alone, we can write down a corresponding limit on the gravitational-wave strength (Abbott et al. 2007b; Wette et al. 2008),
which translates to an ellipticity
where f is the gravitational-wave frequency (assumed here to be 2f*) and is its time derivative.
We compare and for those BRMSPs in the literature, whose Ma has been estimated with the help of binary evolutionary simulations assuming that mass transfer is Eddington-limited and conservative (van den Heuvel & Bitzaraki 1995). The objects in this class are listed in Table 1 together with their spin-down parameters, distances, and Ma values. Typical fractional uncertainties in the quoted Ma are ≲50% (Wijers 1997), mainly because it is unclear how conservative mass transfer really is (van den Heuvel & Bitzaraki 1995). The spin parameters and distance, inferred from the dispersion measure, are drawn from the Australia Telescope National Facility pulsar database3 (Hobbs et al. 2004). We find that the ideal-MHD ellipticity is higher than the spin-down limit for all but three objects (PSR B0820+02, PSR B1800−27, and PSR B1831−00, in parentheses in Table 1). The latter objects are excluded from the subsequent analysis because they do not translate into limits on η.
Table 1. BRMSPs for Which Ma has been Estimated (van den Heuvel & Bitzaraki 1995)
Object | f* | D | Ma | |
---|---|---|---|---|
(Hz) | 10−16 (Hz s−1) | (kpc) | (M☉) | |
B0021−72E | 283 | 78 | 4.9 | 0.7 |
B0655+64 | 5.11 | 0.179 | 0.48 | 0.003 |
(B0820+02) | 1.16 | 1.40 | 1.4 | 0.02 |
(B1800−27) | 2.99 | 1.53 | 3.6 | 0.6 |
(B1831−00) | 1.92 | 0.388 | 5.1 | 0.8 |
B1913+16 | 16.0 | 24 | 7.1 | 0.003 |
B1953+29 | 163 | 7.91 | 5.4 | 0.06 |
J0034−0534 | 533 | 14 | 0.980 | 0.7 |
J0218+4232 | 430 | 140 | 5.85 | 0.7 |
J0437−4715 | 174 | 17 | 0.150 | 0.8 |
J1022+1001 | 60.0 | 1.6 | 0.400 | 0.03 |
J1045−4509 | 134 | 3.1 | 3.24 | 0.7 |
J1713+0747 | 219 | 4.1 | 1.12 | 0.7 |
J2019+2425 | 254 | 4.5 | 0.910 | 0.7 |
J2145−0750 | 62.0 | 1.15 | 0.500 | 0.03 |
J2229+2643 | 336 | 1.6 | 1.43 | 0.7 |
J2317+1439 | 290 | 2.0 | 1.89 | 0.8 |
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Assuming that resistive relaxation reduces below and that the time available to do so is the spin-down age at the present epoch, , we can combine Equations (1), (2), and (6) to get a minimum resistivity ηmin. The results are presented in Figure 1, which displays ηmin as a function of on a log–log plot for the objects discussed in the previous paragraph (filled squares). A least-squares fit yields , where we omit the single obvious outlier at yr from the fit.
Equation (6) is almost certainly too conservative (Owen 2009). If we assume that the electromagnetic torque exceeds the gravitational-wave torque in BRMSPs by at least the same factor (∼4.1 times) as in the Crab pulsar, as indicated by the results of the LIGO Crab search (Abbott et al. 2008; an arbitrary assumption, to be sure, but plausible), then we arrive at a more stringent limit on η. Replacing by in Equation (5), we find that doubles for all the objects plotted in Figure 1 (open circles). Fitting the open circles, we obtain .
3.2. Nondetection of Gravitational Waves
In a similar fashion, we can obtain a less stringent lower limit on η from gravitational-wave observations. Directed searches for gravitational waves from known radio pulsars set an upper limit on the wave strain (and hence ) for these objects (Abbott et al. 2007d; Abbott et al. 2007a). We then apply the same argument as in Section 3.1.
Figure 2 displays the expected gravitational-wave strain h0 as a function of gravitational-wave frequency in the ideal-MHD limit (open diamonds), calculated from , along with the detection thresholds for Initial and Advanced LIGO (dashed and dotted curves, respectively), where we assume 14 days of coherent integration, a false alarm rate of 1%, and a false dismissal rate of 10%. For comparison, we plot (filled squares, where the arrows indicate that it is an upper limit). In the ideal-MHD limit, nine objects lie above the Initial LIGO threshold yet have not been detected (Abbott et al. 2007b), confirming that the ideal-MHD mountain relaxes substantially after accretion shuts off. More significantly, for all nine objects, lies below the Advanced LIGO noise curve, although PSR J0437−4715 is close. Next-generation (e.g., subterranean) interferometers will significantly lower the detection threshold to the point where future gravitational-wave observations will constrain ηmin more tightly than spin-down data (which are likely to be dominated by the electromagnetic torque).
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Standard image High-resolution image4. ACCRETING MILLISECOND PULSARS
For AMSPs, we can derive a limit on the electrical resistivity by assuming that all objects are in spin equilibrium, such that the gravitational radiation reaction torque exactly balances the accretion torque (Bildsten 1998). Watts & Krishnan (2009) cautioned that spin balance may not hold on short timescales. However, even if the torques do not balance instantaneously, it is enough for the present application that they balance on average over the long term.
Torque balance implies an indirect upper limit on the gravitational-wave strain as a function of X-ray flux FX and spin frequency,
or, equivalently, on the gravitational mass ellipticity,
if the star is located at a distance D. When interpreting Equation (8) as an upper limit, it is important to keep two things in mind. (1) The X-ray emission is generally anisotropic. (2) The accretion torque includes a magnetic component, whose lever arm, the Alfvén radius, can extend several stellar radii (A. Melatos & B. Owen 2010, in preparation) (cf. Bildsten 1998).
We are now in a position to compare the resistively relaxed quadrupole given by Equations (1) and (3) to the observational upper limit Equation (8) and thus obtain a lower bound on η. Galloway (2008) tabulated D and FX for 17 AMSPs. The key properties of these objects are listed in Table 2. Four of the objects are persistent X-ray sources; the remainder are transient, with a range of outburst and recurrence times. Burst sources are marked by an asterisk. We compute ηmin for these objects from Equations (1), (3), and (8) and plot it against in Figure 3, where we assume that all mechanical energy of the infalling matter is converted into X-ray luminosity, viz., . A power law is a reasonable fit to the data. We find for the persistent objects (solid curve, fitted to the filled squares) and for the transient objects (dashed curve, fitted to the filled diamonds).
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Standard image High-resolution imageTable 2. Known Accreting Millisecond Rotators (Adapted from Galloway (2008) and Watts et al. (2008))
Object | D | f* | |
---|---|---|---|
(kpc) | (Hz) | 10−11(M☉ yr−1) | |
Persistent sources | |||
4U 1916−05* | 8.9 | 270 | 22 |
4U 1702−429* | 5.5 | 329 | 35 |
4U 1728−34* | 5.2 | 363 | 45 |
Transient sources | |||
MXB 1658−298* | 12 | 567 | 60 |
Aql X−1 | 5.0 | 550 | 110 |
XTE J1814−338 | 8.0 | 314 | 1.4 |
4U 1608−52* | 4.1 | 620 | 100 |
XTE J0929−314 | 4.0 | 185 | 0.40 |
Swift J1756.9−2508 | 8.0 | 182 | 0.14 |
XTE J1807−294 | 5.0 | 191 | 0.30 |
GRS 1741.9−2853* | 8.0 | 589 | 0.010 |
XTE J1751−305 | 8.0 | 435 | 1.2 |
IGR 00291+5934 | 5.0 | 599 | 1.3 |
4U 1636−536 | 6.0 | 581 | 55 |
HETE J1900.1−2455 | 5.0 | 377 | 7.0 |
SAX J1808.4−3658 | 3.4 | 401 | 0.60 |
SAX J1748.9−2021 | 8.1 | 442 | 8.0 |
EXO 0748−676* | 7.5 | 45.0 | 20 |
SAX J1750.8−2900* | 6.8 | 601 | 20 |
A 1744−361* | 9.0 | 530 | 230 |
KS 1731−26* | 7.2 | 524 | 85 |
Note. Type I burst oscillation sources are marked with an asterisk.
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Two AMSPs are observed to spin down secularly between outbursts. Galloway et al. (2002) reported Hz s−1 in XTE J0929−314, while Hartman et al. (2008), who followed the spin evolution of SAX J1808.4−3658 over seven years and four transient outbursts, measured Hz s−1. If we conservatively attribute the spin down to gravitational-wave emission alone, we can obtain an independent upper limit on (and hence ηmin) by the BRMSP method in Section 3.1. For comparison, we include these lower bounds as open diamonds in Figure 3. For XTE J0292−314, the spin-down limit falls 2 orders of magnitude short of the limit provided by torque balance. However, in the case of SAX J1808.4−3658, spin down during quiescence provides a slightly more stringent limit than torque balance.
5. RESISTIVITY VERSUS TEMPERATURE
In this section, we compare the observational limits derived above with theoretical estimates for the crustal resistivity. As η is sensitive to the temperature T, which is different in BRMSPs and AMSPs, the comparison covers two decades of temperature and hence a range of scattering mechanisms.
The thermal relaxation time of a neutron star (∼104 yr) is typically shorter than the accretion timescale (∼106 yr). Hence, the star is in thermal equilibrium during its X-ray lifetime (Yakovlev & Pethick 2004) with its internal temperature set by . Once accretion stops and a BRMSP forms, the crust cools through a combination of neutrino (e.g., via direct Urca processes) and photon cooling. Competing mechanisms, such as viscous dissipation of rotational energy (Page 1998; Yakovlev et al. 1999), magnetic field dissipation (Haensel et al. 1990; Yakovlev et al. 1999; Miralles et al. 1998), and rotochemical heating (Reisenegger 1995; Cheng & Dai 1996; Reisenegger 1997; Iida & Sato 1997) act to reheat the crust. In this paper, for definiteness, we assume that reheating occurs mainly rotochemically: the rate of reactions restoring chemical equilibrium is slower than the rate of change of particle concentrations during spin down (as the centrifugal force diminishes), so that the star is permanently out of chemical equilibrium and generates heat. If the spin-down timescale exceeds other timescales, the temperature depends only on the current spin-down parameters with (Fernández & Reisenegger 2005)
and 2.8 ⩽ T0/104 K ⩽ 4.2.
The range in T0 encompasses two realistic equations of state for the crust (Haensel & Pichon 1994; Pethick et al. 1995; Akmal et al. 1998), five equations of state for the core (Prakash et al. 1988), and a non-interacting Fermi-gas model for the whole star (Shapiro & Teukolsky 1983); see Fernández & Reisenegger (2005) for details. Below, we use Equation (9) to compute T for BRMSPs.
No simple T- relation is available for accreting neutron stars. For the purpose of this paper, we are sensitive to η at the base of the mountain, where the bulk of the accreted matter is confined. The base is located ∼0.1–1 km below the surface for Ma ≈ 0.1 M☉, where we assume that the equation of state in the crust can be modeled using a Skyrme-type effective nucleon–nucleon interaction (Douchin & Haensel 2001). An accurate treatment of the sinking problem is presented elsewhere (Wette et al. 2010). The temperature profile of the accretion column, and hence T at the mountain base, is set by nuclear heat sources inside the star, the composition of the infalling matter, and the local . It is not directly observable.
We consider two scenarios. (1) For transient sources, the temperature in the outer crust is set by a balance between deep-crustal heating during outbursts and subsequent neutrino cooling (Brown et al. 1998). The core temperature attains a steady state after ∼104 yr (Colpi et al. 2000) and the time-averaged X-ray flux can be related to the quiescent flux by Fq ≈ 〈Facc〉/135, where we assume an accretion efficiency of 20% (Rutledge et al. 2002). We estimate the temperature by applying Fick's law, assuming an average thermal conductivity of κ ∼ 1018 erg s−1 cm−1 K−1(Haensel & Zdunik 1990) and a thermal length scale of l ∼ 1 km. This procedure is only applicable if the duration of the outbursts is shorter than the thermal diffusion time of the crust, which is not always true. For example, AMSP KS 1731−260 accretes actively for ≳13 yr (Rutledge et al. 2002; Brown & Cumming 2009).
We note that, according to the Wiedemann–Franz law, the thermal conductivity κ and the electrical conductivity σ are related through κ/σ = π2/3(kB/e)2T at a temperature T, where e denotes the electron charge in cgs units. This agrees well with the theoretical values for σ (dashed lines in Figure 4) under the assumption that κ ∼ 1018 erg s−1 cm−1 K−1.
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Standard image High-resolution image(2) For persistent sources, most of the heat released by thermonuclear burning is immediately radiated outward and the interior thermal balance is dominated by pycnonuclear reactions in the deep crust. Thus, the temperature in the photosphere is set by the accretion energy flux () and gradually increases with depth by a factor of 20–40 to reach (8–70) × 108 K at ∼1 km (for local accretion rates per unit area in the range ; Brown & Bildsten 1998). In order to place a lower bound on T (and hence a lower limit on η), we adopt two independent approaches. First, we assume that the observed X-ray flux is thermal and emitted by a polar cap with area ∼ 1 km2. We then apply the Stefan-Boltzmann blackbody formula, neglecting free–free corrections (Zavlin et al. 1996). The results are verified by comparing with X-ray spectral models in several objects, e.g., for IGR J00291+5934 (Falanga et al. 2005). Second, we follow a procedure similar to the transient sources by assuming that the temperature gradient is balanced by the quiescent flux (which is not observed directly but is less than the observed flux) and again apply Fick's law.
We combine the above T estimates with the observational η limits in Figure 4, which displays ηmin (in s) as a function of T (in K). For BRMSPs, our fit for ηmin as a function of in Figure 1, and the T- relation in Equation (9), converts into a resistivity-temperature relation in the range 2.3 × 104 K ⩽ T ⩽ 1.6 × 105 K. We plot ηmin(T) as a pair of thick solid curves in the left half of Figure 4; the lower and upper curves correspond to T0 = 4.2 × 104 K and T0 = 2.8 × 104 K, respectively (cf. Equation (9)). For AMSPs, we translate into ηmin(T) as detailed above, where we distinguish between persistent accretors assuming blackbody radiation (rightmost, dashed diagonal line), persistent accretors applying Fick's law (lower diagonal line), and transient accretors (upper diagonal line), in the range populated by the objects in Figure 3. For comparison, we overplot the theoretical resistivity for combined electron-impurity and electron-phonon scattering for impurity concentrations Q = 10 and 0.1 (upper and lower dashed curves, respectively).
The electrical conductivity of the neutron star crust is caused by electron scattering off phonons and impurities (Cumming et al. 2001, 2004). For temperatures below the Umklapp temperature (TU ≈ 107 K), electron-phonon scattering is suppressed. In rapid accretors ( yr−1), phonon scattering dominates for Q ≲ 1. The impurity fraction depends on the composition of the ashes produced in steady-state nuclear burning at low densities. Schatz et al. (1999) found a large variety of nuclei in the crust, with Q ≈ 100, except in rapid accretors (Q ∼ 1 for ). Jones (2004a) noted that, if the primordial crust is completely replaced by heterogeneous accreted matter, one has Q ≫ 1. Other authors adopt lower fractions. For example, Pons & Geppert (2007) preferred 10−4 ≲ Q ≲ 10−2 in their model for magnetic field dissipation.
6. DISCUSSION
Figure 4 indicates that spin-down and indirect gravitational-wave stalling limits are on the verge of challenging theoretical models of the electrical resistivity of the accreted crust in a neutron star. The limits from BRMSPs assuming rotochemical heating intersect the Q = 0.1 electron-impurity curve above T ≳ 105 K. Hence, very young BRMSPs (upper end of the curves) tentatively exclude impurity concentrations Q ≲ 0.1 and will place even stricter limits on Q as younger objects are found.
Brown & Cumming (2009) constrained Q by fitting theoretical cooling models to observed post-outburst light curves of KS 1731−260 and MXB 1659−29. These authors found Q ∼ 1, and certainly Q ≪ 10, in close agreement with Shternin et al. (2007). Molecular dynamics simulations confirm this result (Horowitz et al. 2009; Horowitz & Kadau 2009), revealing a phase-separated regular crystal, with low-Q regions embedded in a high-Q phase. One interesting possibility is that the solid phase of the crust in isolated neutron stars is heterogeneous with respect to the nuclear charge (Jones 2004b), lowering the resistivity by 4 orders of magnitude to η ≈ 10−24 s. Recent observations of cooling curves after extended outbursts (Wijnands 2004; Cackett et al. 2006) suggest a high thermal conductivity of the crust, typical of a regular crystal (Rutledge et al. 2002; Shternin et al. 2007).
Future gravitational-wave experiments will tighten the above limits. Advanced LIGO, for example, offers a narrowband configuration, which lowers the instrumental noise by 2 orders of magnitude (Abbott et al. 2007c). The main challenge to searches is posed by parameter uncertainties (Watts et al. 2008). Here, simultaneous electromagnetic observations will prove beneficial, reducing the number of search templates and the computational effort. In any case, this paper illustrates one of the ways in which even gravitational-wave nondetections yield important independent information about the constitutive properties of neutron stars.
Several shortcomings in the theoretical modeling of magnetic mountains still need to be addressed, most notably sinking of the mountain into the crust (Wette et al. 2010), and a realistic equation of state which includes nuclear reactions. In addition, in the context of this article, it is important to ultimately include the Hall effect. While it is not dissipative, the Hall effect transfers magnetic energy from large to small scales through a Hall cascade (Goldreich & Reisenegger 1992). The small-scale magnetic structures subsequently decay on the Ohmic timescale. The Hall timescale, tHall, has been computed for neutron star crusts by Cumming et al. (2004), who found 103 ≲ tHall/yr ≲ 107, well below the typical X-ray lifetime of an LMXB. This result, however, is only valid as long as the impurity factor Q is low. For higher Q ≳ 1, Ohmic dissipation always dominates Hall dissipation (Cumming et al. 2004). Furthermore, a subsurface toroidal magnetic field can create small-scale poloidal field structures through a Hall-drift induced instability, where a background shear in the electron velocity drives the growth of long-wavelength modes (Cumming et al. 2004; Geppert et al. 2003; Rheinhardt & Geppert 2002). The consequences of this instability for the magnetic field evolution in neutron stars are still unclear; perturbations to the crustal field are effectively reflected by the solid/fluid interface and might be trapped in the lower crust layers (Cumming et al. 2004).
In this paper, the theoretical is intentionally calculated differently for BRMSPs and AMSPs. On the face of it, this seems unnecessary, given that BRMSPs evolve from AMSPs. But we are forced to take this approach because we do not know the historic for any specific BRMSP. Hence, we cannot apply Equation (1) to get , while Equation (2) does not apply in the context of ongoing accretion. On the plus side, however, the effect of Ohmic diffusion during ongoing accretion has not been studied properly in two and three dimensions, as Cumming et al. (2001) pointed out. It is therefore an advantage to have two independent calculations for the two classes of objects, pending further studies.
Finally, if the magnetic mountain picture of field evolution is accurate, then the spin-down limits in Section 3.1 can be combined with magnetic moment data for BRMSPs to test the self-consistency of the argument in this paper. For example, if the buried magnetic field is anchored deep in the core, it resurrects as the mountain relaxes resistively, tending toward its natal value over many τd. This can lead to an inconsistency if is too small, for then the resurrected magnetic moment may exceed the value observed. Unfortunately, the above test cannot be applied (yet) with confidence, because it rests heavily on the assumption that the magnetic field is anchored in the core. If, by contrast, the source currents are confined to the crust, minimal field resurrection occurs; both and the magnetic moment decay resistively and no useful constraint emerges. The question of where the field is anchored, crust or core, is hotly debated and remains one of the main obstacles in understanding magnetic field evolution in accreting neutron stars (Konar & Bhattacharya 1997; Ruderman et al. 1998; Pons et al. 2009).
M.V. acknowledges the support of the University of Melbourne through a David Hay Postgraduate Writing-Up Award.
Footnotes
- 1
Flux-freezing is valid in the crust, down to a depth where carbon ignition occurs in one-dimensional models, but not necessarily in the magnetic belt region, where the field is highly distorted and diffusion proceeds faster.
- 2
- 3