353 research outputs found
Discriminating hadronic and quark stars through gravitational waves of fluid pulsation modes
We investigate non-radial oscillations of hadronic, hybrid and pure
self-bound strange quark stars with maximum masses above the mass of the
recently observed massive pulsars PSR J1614-2230 and PSR J0348-0432 with . For the hadronic equation of state we employ different
parametrizations of a relativistic mean-field model and for quark matter we use
the MIT bag model including the effect of strong interactions and color
superconductivity. We find that the first pressure mode for strange quark stars
has a very different shape than for hadronic and hybrid stars. For strange
quarks stars the frequency of the p1 mode is larger than 6 kHz and diverge at
small stellar masses, but for hadronic and hybrid stars it is in the range 4-6
kHz. This allows an observational identification of strange stars even if extra
information such as the mass, the radius or the gravitational redshift of the
object is unavailable or uncertain. Also, we find as in previous works that the
frequency of the g-mode associated with the quark-hadron discontinuity in a
hybrid star is in the range 0.4-1 kHz for all masses. Thus, compact objects
emitting gravitational waves above 6 kHz should be interpreted as strange quark
stars and those emitting a signal within 0.4-1 kHz should be interpreted as
hybrid stars.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Hybrid stars in the light of the massive pulsar PSR J1614-2230
We perform a systematic study of hybrid star configurations using several
parametrizations of a relativistic mean-field hadronic EoS and the NJL model
for three-flavor quark matter. For the hadronic phase we use the stiff GM1 and
TM1 parametrizations, as well as the very stiff NL3 model. In the NJL
Lagrangian we include scalar, vector and 't Hooft interactions. The vector
coupling constant is treated as a free parameter. We also consider that
there is a split between the deconfinement and the chiral phase transitions
which is controlled by changing the conventional value of the vacuum pressure
in the NJL thermodynamic potential by , being a free parameter. We find that, as we
increase the value of , hybrid stars have a larger maximum
mass but are less stable, i.e. hybrid configurations are stable within a
smaller range of central densities. For large enough , stable
hybrid configurations are not possible at all. The effect of increasing the
coupling constant is very similar. We show that stable hybrid
configurations with a maximum mass larger than the observed mass of the pulsar
PSR J1614-2230 are possible for a large region of the parameter space of
and provided the hadronic equation of state contains nucleons
only. When the baryon octet is included in the hadronic phase, only a very
small region of the parameter space allows to explain the mass of PSR
J1614-2230. We compare our results with previous calculations of hybrid stars
within the NJL model. We show that it is possible to obtain stable hybrid
configurations also in the case that corresponds to the
conventional NJL model for which the pressure and density vanish at zero
temperature and chemical potential.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures; typos in Table 1 have been correcte
- …