Angular momentum transport during X-ray bursts on neutron stars: a numerical general relativistic hydrodynamical study
A.Hujeirat, F.-K. Thielemann

TL;DR
This study uses 3D general relativistic hydrodynamics simulations to analyze how angular momentum is transported during X-ray bursts on neutron stars, revealing the role of viscous fronts in matter compression and spin evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical framework for simulating angular momentum transport during X-ray bursts, highlighting the impact of viscous fronts and proposing a viscosity parameter consistent with observations.
Findings
Viscous fronts propagate faster than fluid motion, decoupling angular momentum from matter.
A viscosity parameter around 0.1 fits observational data.
Spin-up during bursts is transient, followed by spin-down due to cooling effects.
Abstract
The distribution of angular momentum of the matter during X-ray bursts on neutron stars is studied by means of 3D axi-symmetric general relativistic hydrodynamics. The set of fully general relativistic Navier-Stokes equations is solved implicitly using the implicit solver GR-I-RMHD in combination with a third order spatial and second order temporal advection scheme. The viscous operators are formulated using a Kerr-like metric in the fixed background of a slowly rotating neutron star whose radius coincides with the corresponding last stable orbit. The importance of these operators and their possible simplifications are discussed as well. In the rotating case and depending on the viscosity parameter, , it is found that the viscously-initiated fronts at the center of bursts propagate at much faster speed than the fluid motion. These fast fronts act to decouple angular…
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