Toward an understanding of thermal X-ray emission of pulsars
M. Yu, R. X. Xu

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical model for the thermal X-ray emission of pulsars assuming they are solid quark stars, exploring additional heating mechanisms to explain observed luminosities and comparing thermal evolution predictions with observational data.
Contribution
It introduces a model for pulsar thermal emission as solid quark stars and investigates possible heating mechanisms to match observations.
Findings
Residual thermal energy cannot explain observed X-ray luminosities.
Accretion and pulsar spindown are plausible heating mechanisms.
Thermal evolution curves fit observational data of 17 pulsars.
Abstract
We present a theoretical model for the thermal X-ray emission and cooling of isolated pulsars, assuming that pulsars are solid quark stars. We calculate the heat capacity for such a quark star, and the results show that the residual thermal energy cannot sustain the observed thermal X-ray luminosities seen in typical isolated X-ray pulsars. We conclude that other heating mechanisms must be in operation if the pulsars are in fact solid quark stars. Two possible heating mechanisms are explored. Firstly, for pulsars with little magnetospheric activities, accretion from the interstellar medium or from the material in the associated supernova remnants may power the observed thermal emission. In the propeller regime, a disk-accretion rate 1% of the Eddington rate with an accretion onto the stellar surface at a rate of could explain the observed emission…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-pressure geophysics and materials · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics
