67 research outputs found

    On the Solution Space of Differentially Rotating Neutron Stars in General Relativity

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    A highly accurate, multi-domain spectral code is used in order to construct sequences of general relativistic, differentially rotating neutron stars in axisymmetry and stationarity. For bodies with a spheroidal topology and a homogeneous or an N=1 polytropic equation of state, we investigate the solution space corresponding to broad ranges of degree of differential rotation and stellar densities. In particular, starting from static and spherical configurations, we analyse the changes of the corresponding surface shapes as the rate of rotation is increased. For a sufficiently weak degree of differential rotation, the sequences terminate at a mass-shedding limit, while for moderate and strong rates of differential rotation, they exhibit a continuous parametric transition to a regime of toroidal fluid bodies. In this article, we concentrate on the appearance of this transition, analyse in detail its occurrence and show its relevance for the calculation of astrophysical sequences. Moreover, we find that the solution space contains various types of spheroidal configurations, which were not considered in previous work, mainly due to numerical limitations.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, version to be published in MNRAS ; no major changes with respect to v1: title, abstract and other things were modified to put more emphasis on general aspects of the wor

    Maximum mass and stability of differentially rotating neutrons stars

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    We present our study of stability of differentially rotating, axisymmetric neutron stars described by a polytropic equation of state with Γ=2\Gamma = 2. We focus on quasi-toroidal solutions with a degree of differential rotation A~=1\widetilde A=1. Our results show that for a wide range of parameters hypermassive, quasi-toroidal neutron stars are dynamically stable against quasi-radial perturbations, which may have implications for newly born neutron stars and binary neutron stars mergers.Comment: Presented at the 8th Conference of the Polish Society on Relativity, submitted to Acta Physica Polonica B Proceedings Supplemen

    Jacobi-like bar mode instability of relativistic rotating bodies

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    We perform some numerical study of the secular triaxial instability of rigidly rotating homogeneous fluid bodies in general relativity. In the Newtonian limit, this instability arises at the bifurcation point between the Maclaurin and Jacobi sequences. It can be driven in astrophysical systems by viscous dissipation. We locate the onset of instability along several constant baryon mass sequences of uniformly rotating axisymmetric bodies for compaction parameter M/R=0−0.275M/R = 0-0.275. We find that general relativity weakens the Jacobi like bar mode instability, but the stabilizing effect is not very strong. According to our analysis the critical value of the ratio of the kinetic energy to the absolute value of the gravitational potential energy (T/∣W∣)crit(T/|W|)_{\rm crit} for compaction parameter as high as 0.275 is only 30% higher than the Newtonian value. The critical value of the eccentricity depends very weakly on the degree of relativity and for M/R=0.275M/R=0.275 is only 2% larger than the Newtonian value at the onset for the secular bar mode instability. We compare our numerical results with recent analytical investigations based on the post-Newtonian expansion.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Dynamical stability of strange quark stars

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    We show that the mass-radius (M−R)(M-R) relation corresponding to the MIT bag models of strange quark matter (SQM) and the models obtained by Day et al (1998) do not provide the necessary and sufficient condition for dynamical stability for the equilibrium configurations, since such configurations can not even fulfill the necessary condition of hydrostatic equilibrium provided by the exterior Schwarzschild solution. These findings will remain unaltered and can be extended to any other sequence of pure SQM. This study explicitly show that although the strange quark matter might exist in the state of zero pressure and temperature, but the models of pure strange quark `stars' can not exist in the state of hydrostatic equilibrium on the basis of General Relativity Theory. This study can affect the results which are claiming that various objects like - RX J1856.5-3754, SAX J1808.4-3658, 4U 1728-34, PSR 0943+10 etc. might be strange stars.Comment: 7 pages (including 6 tables and 1 figure) in MNRAS styl

    Last orbits of binary strange quark stars

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    We present the first relativistic calculations of the final phase of inspiral of a binary system consisting of two stars built predominantely of strange quark matter (strange quark stars). We study the precoalescing stage within the Isenberg-Wilson-Mathews approximation of general relativity using a multidomain spectral method. A hydrodynamical treatment is performed under the assumption that the flow is either rigidly rotating or irrotational, taking into account the finite density at the stellar surface -- a distinctive feature with respect to the neutron star case. The gravitational-radiation driven evolution of the binary system is approximated by a sequence of quasi-equilibrium configurations at fixed baryon number and decreasing separation. We find that the innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) is given by an orbital instability both for synchronized and irrotational systems. This constrasts with neutron stars for which the ISCO is given by the mass-shedding limit in the irrotational case. The gravitational wave frequency at the ISCO, which marks the end of the inspiral phase, is found to be 1400 Hz for two irrotational 1.35 Msol strange stars and for the MIT bag model of strange matter with massless quarks and a bag constant B=60 MeV/fm^3. Detailed comparisons with binary neutrons star models, as well as with third order Post-Newtonian point-mass binaries are given.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, improved conclusion and figures, references added, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Stability of strange stars (SS) derived from a realistic equation of state

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    A realistic equation of state (EOS) leads to realistic strange stars (ReSS) which are compact in the mass radius plot, close to the Schwarzchild limiting line (Dey et al 1998). Many of the observed stars fit in with this kind of compactness, irrespective of whether they are X-ray pulsars, bursters or soft γ\gamma repeaters or even radio pulsars. We point out that a change in the radius of a star can be small or large, when its mass is increasing and this depends on the position of a particular star on the mass radius curve. We carry out a stability analysis against radial oscillations and compare with the EOS of other strange star (SS) models. We find that the ReSS is stable and an M-R region can be identified to that effect.Comment: 16 pages including 5 figures. Accepted for publication in MPL

    Are rotating strange quark stars good sources of gravitational waves?

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    We study the viscosity driven (Jacobi-like) bar mode instability of rapidly rotating strange stars in general relativity. A triaxial, "bar shaped" compact star could be an efficient source of continuous wave gravitational radiation in the frequency range of the forthcoming interferometric detectors. We locate the secular instability point along several constant baryon mass sequences of uniformly rotating strange stars described by the MIT bag model. Contrary to neutron stars, strange stars with T/|W| (the ratio of the rotational kinetic energy to the absolute value of the gravitational potential energy) much lower than the corresponding value for the mass-shed limit can be secularly unstable to bar mode formation if shear viscosity is high enough to damp out any deviation from uniform rotation. The instability develops for a broad range of gravitational masses and rotational frequencies of strange quark stars. It imposes strong constraints on the lower limit of the frequency at the innermost stable circular orbit around rapidly rotating strange stars. The above results are robust for all linear self-bound equations of state assuming the growth time of the instability is faster than the damping timescale. We discuss astrophysical scenarios where triaxial instabilities (r-mode and viscosity driven instability) could be relevant in strange stars described by the standard MIT bag model of normal quark matter. Taking into account actual values of viscosities in strange quark matter and neglecting the magnetic field we show that Jacobi-like instability cannot develop in any astrophysicaly interesting temperature windows. The main result is that strange quark stars described by the MIT bag model can be accelerated to very high frequency in Low Mass X-ray binaries if the strange quark mass is ~ 200 MeV or higher.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, to appear in Astronomy and Astrophysic

    Maximum mass of a cold compact star

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    We calculate the maximum mass of the class of compact stars described by Vaidya-Tikekar \cite{VT01} model. The model permits a simple method of systematically fixing bounds on the maximum possible mass of cold compact stars with a given value of radius or central density or surface density. The relevant equations of state are also determined. Although simple, the model is capable of describing the general features of the recently observed very compact stars. For the calculation, no prior knowledge of the equation of state (EOS) is required. This is in contrast to the earlier calculations for maximum mass which were done by choosing first the relevant EOSs and using those to solve the TOV equation with appropriate boundary conditions. The bounds obtained by us are comparable and, in some cases, more restrictive than the earlier results.Comment: 18 pages including 4 *.eps figures. Submitted for publicatio

    Strange Pulsar Hypothesis

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    It appears that there is a genuine shortage of radio pulsars with surface magnetic fields significantly smaller than ∼108\sim 10^8 Gauss. We propose that the pulsars with very low magnetic fields are actually strange stars locked in a state of minimum free energy and therefore at a limiting value of the magnetic field which can not be lowered by the system spontaneously.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, uses LaTeX2e(mn2e.cls) and astrobib(mnras.bst), accepted in MNRA
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