scholarly journals Strange Star Equations of State Revisited

2005 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 292-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Debora P. Menezes ◽  
Don B. Melrose

AbstractMotivated by recent suggestions that strange stars can be responsible for glitches and other observational features of pulsars, we review some possible equations of state and their implications for models of neutron, hybrid, and strange stars. We consider the MIT bag model and also strange matter in the colour–flavour locked phase. The central energy densities for strange stars are higher than the central densities of ordinary neutron stars. Strange stars are bound by the strong force and so can also rotate much faster than neutron stars. These results are only weakly dependent on the model used for the quark matter. If just one of the existing mass-to-radius ratio constraint is valid, most neutron stars equations of state are ruled out, but all the strange stars equations of state presented in this work remain consistent with the constraint.

2005 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 1959-1969 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. PÉREZ MARTÍNEZ ◽  
H. PÉREZ ROJAS ◽  
H. J. MOSQUERA CUESTA ◽  
M. BOLIGAN ◽  
M. G. ORSARIA

Quark matter is expected to exist in the interior of compact stellar objects as neutron stars or even the more exotic strange stars, based on the Bodmer–Witten conjecture. Bare strange quark stars and (normal) strange quark-matter stars, those possessing a baryon (electron-supported) crust, are hypothesized as good candidates to explain the properties of a set of peculiar stellar sources such as the enigmatic X-ray source RX J1856.5-3754, some pulsars such as PSR B1828-11 and PSR B1642-03, and the anomalous X-ray pulsars and soft γ-ray repeaters. In the MIT bag model, quarks are treated as a degenerate Fermi gas confined to a region of space having a vacuum energy density B bag (the Bag constant). In this note, we modify the MIT bag model by including the electromagnetic interaction. We also show that this version of the MIT model implies the anisotropy of the bag pressure due to the presence of the magnetic field. The equations of state of the degenerate quarks gases are studied in the presence of ultra strong magnetic fields. The behavior of a system made up of quarks having (or not) anomalous magnetic moment is reviewed. A structural instability is found, which is related to the anisotropic nature of the pressures in this highly magnetized matter. The conditions for the collapse of this system are obtained and compared to a previous model of neutron stars that is built on a neutron gas having anomalous magnetic moment.


2017 ◽  
Vol 51 (1 (242)) ◽  
pp. 71-76
Author(s):  
Yu.L. Vartanyan ◽  
A.K. Grigoryan ◽  
H.A. Shahinyan

Equation of state of strange quark matter has been studied in the framework of MIT bag model, when vacuum pressure $B$ depends on concentration of baryons $n$. The actuality of such studies is conditioned by the increasing of quark matter density from surface to star center. In the literature there exist different representations of function $B(n)$. In the present work Gaussian parametrization is used, which is based on the idea of existence of asymptotic limiting value of this parameter. For four groups of parameters the equations of state of quark matter were determined. The main integral parameters of star configurations were obtained by numerically integrating of star equilibrium equations (the TOV equation). In the considered case it turns that when vacuum pressure dependence on concentration of baryons is taken into account, configurations of strange stars have maximal masses less than two solar masses.   Erratum: Proc. YSU A: Phys. Math. Sci. 52 (2018), 68


1998 ◽  
Vol 07 (01) ◽  
pp. 29-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. G. BENVENUTO ◽  
G. LUGONES

We study the general properties of compact objects made up of strange matter in the framework of a new equation of state in which the quark masses are parametrized as functions of the baryon density, so that they are heavy (light) at low (high) densities. This has been called the "quark mass-density-dependent model." In this approximation, the strange matter equation of state is rather similar to the corresponding to the MIT Bag Model, but it is significantly stiffer at low densities. Such a property modifies the structure of strange stars in a sizeable way. In this framework, we calculate the structure of strange stars (mass, radius, central density, gravitational redshift, moment of inertia, and total baryon number) finding that the resulting structures are rather similar to those obtained in the MIT Bag model, although some important differences appear. Comparing to the standard bagged case (with a bag constant in the range of B = 60 - 80 MeV fm-3), we find that these objects may be more massive and may show gravitational redshifts larger (up to ≈ 10%) than in the bag case. The moment of inertia and total baryon number may be larger than in the bagged case up to a factor of three. We also calculate the first three radial pulsation modes of these objects, finding that the relation of period vs. gravitational redshift is rather similar to the bag case. Also, we present an analytical treatment for such modes in the low-mass strange stars regime, which is in reasonable agreement with the numerical results.


2001 ◽  
Vol 16 (13) ◽  
pp. 2435-2445 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. K. SAHU ◽  
S. K. PATRA

We study the effect of a strong magnetic field on interacting quark matter and apply the same to strange star. We find that interacting strange matter is less stable than noninteracting strange matter in the presence of a strong magnetic field. We then calculate strange star structure parameters such as mass and radius and find that the strange star is less compact for interacting quark matter than for free quark matter in presence of strong magnetic field. The maximum masses of strange stars are found to be within the recent observational limit.


2004 ◽  
Vol 13 (07) ◽  
pp. 1249-1253
Author(s):  
DÉBORA P. MENEZES ◽  
C. PROVIDÊNCIA

We investigate the properties of mixed stars formed by hadronic and quark matter in β-equilibrium described by appropriate equations of state (EOS) in the framework of relativistic mean-field theory. The calculations were performed for T=0 and for finite temperatures and also for fixed entropies with and without neutrino trapping in order to describe neutron and proto-neutron stars. The star properties are discussed. Maximum allowed masses for proto-neutron stars are much larger when neutrino trapping is imposed.


1997 ◽  
Vol 481 (2) ◽  
pp. 954-962 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Anand ◽  
Ashok Goyal ◽  
V. K. Gupta ◽  
S. Singh

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Germán Malfatti

This thesis work focuses on studying the possible existence of phase transitions in the immediate compact remnants of core collapse supernova, neutron stars, and the theoretical models that describe the interior of dense matter. Specifically, we are interested in analyzing the feasibility of a transition from hadronic matter to quark matter in the cores of these objects. The density of matter inside neutron stars is several times that of atomic nuclei, and the equation of state that describes such matter in such a regime is still unknown. In this context, it is known that the interaction between the constituents of nucleons, the quarks, weakens with increasing density due to the intrinsic property of the QCD known as it asymptotic freedom. Therefore, matter should either dissolve into a quark-free state at high densities, or else form a superconduct- ing state of color. This superconducting phase of color would be energetically favorable, if it were present in a cold neutron star, since a system of fermions that interact weakly at low temperature is unstable with respect to the formation of Cooper pairs. Although it is impossible to know both theoretically and experimentally whether these phases exist in neutron stars, the interpolation of the resolvable part of QCD at high densities, together with the hadronic equations of state at low densities, suggest that they could appear in the interior of compact objects. For the phase transition we will use two different formalisms: the Maxwell formalism, in which an abrupt phase transition between hadronic and quark matter without mixed phase formation is assumed, and the Gibbs formalism, in which a mixed phase in which hadrons and quarks coexist. For the description of hadronic matter, we will use different parametrizations of the relativistic mean field model with density-dependent coupling constants. For the description of quark matter we will use an effective nonlocal Nambu Jona-Lasinio model of three flavors with vector interactions, in which we will include the possibility of formation of diquarks to model a superconducting phase of color in SU (3), which we will call 2SC + s. Phase diagrams and equations of state of quark matter at finite temperature are presented, and the influence of that kind of matter on observables associated with neutron stars is investigated. Likewise, using hybrid equations of state, the simplified thermal evolution of compact stars during their formation is studied, from their state of proto-neutron stars to that of cold neutron stars, and the results obtained are compared with recent astrophysical observations. The pa- rameterizations used in this work are adjusted to the most recent measurements of masses and coupling constants of the QCD, which imposes strong restrictions on the existence of quark matter in proto-stars, unlike what happens with less realistic models or with more free parameters. However, the results obtained indicate that even considering these restrictions, the occurrence of quark matter in the nuclei of these stars remains a promis- ing possibility. The remaining free parameters of the models were adjusted taking into account the observational restrictions, coming from precise determinations of the pulsars masses of ∼ 2 M⊙, and the event corresponding to the fusion of two neutron stars, known as GW170817. The fact that the use of more realistic models for the description of the dense matter in these objects indicates the presence of quark matter inside neutron stars, could be an answer to the question of the behavior of that kind of matter and the determination of its corresponding equation of state.


2003 ◽  
Vol 214 ◽  
pp. 191-198 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. X. Xu

A pedagogical overview of strange quark matter and strange stars is presented. After a historical notation of the research and an introduction to quark matter, a major part is devoted to the physics and astrophysics of strange stars, with attention being paid to the possible ways by which neutron stars and strange stars can be distinguished in astrophysics. Recent possible evidence for bare strange stars is also discussed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pedro H. G. Cardoso ◽  
Tiago Nunes da Silva ◽  
Airton Deppman ◽  
Débora P. Menezes
Keyword(s):  

Particles ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 447-456 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Salinas ◽  
Thomas Klähn ◽  
Prashanth Jaikumar

The vector interaction enhanced Bag model (vBag) for dense quark matter extends the commonly used thermodynamic Bag model (tdBag) by incorporating effects of dynamical chiral symmetry breaking (D χ SB) and vector repulsion. Motivated by the suggestion that the stability of strange matter is in tension with chiral symmetry breaking (D χ SB) we examine the parameter space for its stability in the vBag model in this work. Assuming the chiral transition occurs at sufficiently low density, we determine the stability region of strange matter as a function of the effective Bag constant and the vector coupling. As an astrophysical application, we construct contours of maximum mass M max and radius at maximum mass R max in this region of parameter space. We also study the stability of strange stars in the vBag model with maximum mass in the 2 M ⊙ range by computing the spectrum of radial oscillations, and comparing to results from the tdBag model, find some notable differences.


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