Electromagnetic signals from bare strange stars

Massimo Mannarelli, Giulia Pagliaroli, Alessandro Parisi, and Luigi Pilo
Phys. Rev. D 89, 103014 – Published 27 May 2014

Abstract

The crystalline color superconducting phase is believed to be the ground state of deconfined quark matter for sufficiently large values of the strange quark mass. This phase has the remarkable property of being more rigid than any known material. It can therefore sustain large shear stresses, supporting torsional oscillations of large amplitude. The torsional oscillations could lead to observable electromagnetic signals if strange stars have a crystalline color superconducting crust. Indeed, considering a simple model of a strange star with a bare quark matter surface, it turns out that a positive charge is localized in a narrow shell about ten Fermi thick beneath the star surface. The electrons needed to neutralize the positive charge of quarks spill in the star exterior forming an electromagnetically bounded atmosphere hundreds of Fermi thick. When a torsional oscillation is excited, for example by a stellar glitch, the positive charge oscillates with typical kHz frequencies, for a crust thickness of about one-tenth of the stellar radius, to hundreds of Hz, for a crust thickness of about nine-tenths of the stellar radius. Higher frequencies, of the order of few GHz, can be reached if the star crust is of the order of a few centimeters thick. We estimate the emitted power considering emission by an oscillating magnetic dipole, finding that it can be quite large, of the order of 1045erg/s for a thin crust. The associated relaxation times are very uncertain, with values ranging between microseconds and minutes, depending on the crust thickness. The radiated photons will be in part absorbed by the electronic atmosphere, but a sizable fraction of them should be emitted by the star.

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  • Received 10 March 2014

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.89.103014

© 2014 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Massimo Mannarelli* and Giulia Pagliaroli

  • INFN, Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso, I-67100 Assergi (AQ), Italy

Alessandro Parisi and Luigi Pilo§

  • Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiche e Chimiche, Università di L’Aquila, I-67010 L’Aquila, Italy INFN, Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso, I-67100 Assergi (AQ), Italy

  • *massimo@lngs.infn.it
  • giulia.pagliaroli@lngs.infn.it
  • alessandro.parisi@lngs.infn.it
  • §luigi.pilo@aquila.infn.it

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Issue

Vol. 89, Iss. 10 — 15 May 2014

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