Small glitches: the role of strange nuggets?

@article{Lai2015SmallGT,
  title={Small glitches: the role of strange nuggets?},
  author={Xiaoyu Lai and Renxin Xu},
  journal={Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics},
  year={2015},
  volume={16}
}
  • X. LaiR. Xu
  • Published 11 June 2015
  • Physics
  • Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics
Pulsar glitches, i.e. the sudden spin-ups of pulsars, have been detected for most known pulsars. The mechanism giving rise to this kind of phenomenon is uncertain, although a large data set has been built. In the framework of the starquake model, based on Baym & Pines, the glitch sizes (the relative increases of spin-frequencies during glitches) ΔΩ/Ω depend on the released energies during glitches, with less released energies corresponding to smaller glitch sizes. On the other hand, as one of… 

Pulsar glitches in a strangeon star model

Pulsar-like compact stars provide us a unique laboratory to explore properties of dense matter at supra-nuclear densities. One of the models for pulsar-like stars is that they are totally composed of

Microglitches in radio pulsars: the role of strange nuggets

Strange Nuggets are believed to be among the relics of the early universe. They appear as dark matter due to their low charge-to-mass ratio. Their distribution is believed to be the same as that of

Bulk strong matter: the trinity

Our world is wonderful because of the normal but negligibly small baryonic part (i.e., atoms) although unknown dark matter and dark energy dominate the Universe. A stable atomic nucleus could be

Strange Matter: a state before black hole

Normal baryonic matter inside an evolved massive star can be intensely compressed by gravity after a supernova. General relativity predicts formation of a black hole if the core material is

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 40 REFERENCES

Two types of glitches in a solid quark star model

Glitch (sudden spin-up) is a common phenomenon in pulsar observations. However, the physical mechanism of glitch is still a matter of debate because it depends on the puzzle of pulsar's inner

A study of 315 glitches in the rotation of 102 pulsars

The rotation of more than 700 pulsars has been monitored using the 76-m Lovell Telescope at Jodrell Bank. Here we report on a new search for glitches in the observations, revealing 128 new glitches

ANTI-GLITCH INDUCED BY COLLISION OF A SOLID BODY WITH THE MAGNETAR 1E 2259+586

Glitches have been frequently observed in neutron stars. Previously, these glitches have unexceptionally manifested as sudden spin-ups that can be explained as being due to impulsive transfer of

Pulsar slow glitches in a solid quark star model

A series of five unusual slow glitches of the radio pulsar B1822-09 (PSR J1825-0935) was observed between 1995 and 2005. This is a phenomenon that is understood in a solid quark star model, and

An anti-glitch in a magnetar

X-ray timing observations of the magnetar 1E 2259+586 exhibited a clear ‘anti-glitch’—a sudden spin-down, supporting the need for a rethinking of glitch theory for all neutron stars.

Vela Pulsar and Its Synchrotron Nebula

We present high-resolution Chandra X-ray observations of PSR B0833-45, the 89 ms pulsar associated with the Vela supernova remnant. We have acquired two observations separated by 1 month to search

Pulsar glitches and restlessness as a hard superfluidity phenomenon

SEVERAL pulsars1 have “restless” behaviour of the period similar to that of the Crab and Vela pulsars2 which has been explained3 as due to “microquakes” in the crust. A glitch has also been observed1

Detection of 107 glitches in 36 southern pulsars

Timing observations from the Parkes 64-m radio telescope for 165 pulsarsbetween 1990 and 2011 have been searched for period glitches. Data spansfor each pulsar ranged between 5.3 and 20.8 yr. From

Formation of the seed black holes: a role of quark nuggets?

Strange quark nuggets (SQNs) could be the relics of the cosmological QCD phase transition, and they could very likely be the candidate of cold quark matter if survived the cooling of the later

THE END OF THE MACHO ERA, REVISITED: NEW LIMITS ON MACHO MASSES FROM HALO WIDE BINARIES

In order to determine an upper bound for the mass of the massive compact halo objects (MACHOs), we use the halo binaries contained in a recent catalog by Allen & Monroy-Rodríguez. To dynamically