Spread of Matter over a Neutron-Star Surface During Disk Accretion: Deceleration of Rapid Rotation
N.A. Inogamov (1,2), R.A. Sunyaev (2,3) ((1) Landau Institute for, Theoretical Physics, RAS (2) Max-Planck Institut fuer Astrophysik (3) Space, Research Institute, RAS)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how matter spreads and decelerates over a neutron star's surface during disk accretion, revealing turbulent and wave-driven mechanisms that influence stellar rotation and nuclear burning processes.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model of matter deceleration involving turbulence and gravity waves, explaining spin-up and spin-down phenomena on neutron star surfaces during accretion.
Findings
Turbulent braking can spin up the star's surface layers.
Giant gravity waves can dissipate energy and reduce azimuthal velocity.
Deep atmospheric heating may suppress explosive helium burning.
Abstract
The problem of disk accretion onto the surface of a neutron star with a weak magnetic field at a luminosity exceeding several percent of Eddington is reduced to the problem of the braking of a hypersonic flow with a velocity that is 0.4-0.5 of the speed of light above the base of the spreading layer -- a dense atmosphere made up of previously fallen matter. We show that turbulent braking in the Prandtl-Karman model with universally accepted coefficients for terrestrial conditions and laboratory experiments and a ladder of interacting gravity waves in a stratified quasi-exponential atmosphere at standard Richardson numbers lead to a spin-up of the massive zone that extends to the ocean made up of a plasma with degenerate electrons. Turbulent braking in the ocean at the boundary with the outer solid crust reduces the rotation velocity to the solid-body rotation velocity of the star. This…
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