We investigate the possibility that stellar mass black holes, with masses in
the range of 3.8M⊙ and 6M⊙, respectively, could be in fact
quark stars in the Color-Flavor-Locked (CFL) phase. Depending on the value of
the gap parameter, rapidly rotating CFL quark stars can achieve much higher
masses than standard neutron stars, thus making them possible stellar mass
black hole candidates. Moreover, quark stars have a very low luminosity and a
completely absorbing surface - the infalling matter on the surface of the quark
star is converted into quark matter. A possibility of distinguishing CFL quark
stars from stellar mass black holes could be through the study of thin
accretion disks around rapidly rotating quark stars and Kerr type black holes,
respectively. Furthermore, we show that the radiation properties of accretion
disks around black holes and CFL quark stars are also very similar. However,
strange stars exhibit a low luminosity, but high temperature bremsstrahlung
spectrum, which, in combination with the emission properties of the accretion
disk, may be the key signature to differentiate massive strange stars from
black hole.Comment: 27 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA