We carry out a general-relativistic global linear stability analysis of the
amassed carbon fuel on the surface of an accreting neutron star to determine
the conditions under which superbursts occur. We reproduce the general
observational characteristics of superbursts, including burst fluences,
recurrence times, and the absence of superbursts on stars with accretion rates
below 10% of the Eddington limit. By comparing our results with observations,
we are able to set constraints on neutron star parameters such as the stellar
radius and neutrino cooling mechanism in the core. Specifically, we find that
accreting neutron stars with ordered crusts and highly efficient neutrino
emission in their cores (due to direct URCA or pionic reactions, for example)
produce extremely energetic (> 10^44 ergs) superbursts which are inconsistent
with observations, in agreement with previous investigations. Also, because of
pycnonuclear burning of carbon, they do not have superbursts in the range of
accretion rates at which superbursts are actually observed unless the crust is
very impure. Stars with less efficient neutrino emission (due to modified URCA
reactions, for example) produce bursts that agree better with observations.
Stars with highly inefficient neutrino emission in their cores produce bursts
that agree best with observations. All systems that accrete primarily hydrogen
and in which superbursts are observed show evidence of H- and He-burning
delayed mixed bursts. We speculate that delayed mixed bursts provide sufficient
amounts of carbon fuel for superbursts and are thus a prerequisite for having
superbursts. We compare our global stability analysis to approximate one-zone
criteria used by other authors and identify a particular set of approximations
that give accurate results for most choices of parameters. (abstract truncated)Comment: 43 pages, 18 figures, accepted by Ap