Gravitational-wave bursts and stochastic background from superfluid vortex avalanches during pulsar glitches
L. Warszawski, A. Melatos

TL;DR
This paper models gravitational-wave signals from pulsar glitches caused by superfluid vortex avalanches, providing estimates of signal strength and implications for observational bounds based on LIGO data.
Contribution
It introduces a first-principles calculation of gravitational waves from vortex dynamics during pulsar glitches, considering different unpinning geometries and deriving amplitude scalings.
Findings
Individual glitch wave strain estimated at 10^{-24} for typical parameters.
Non-detection of signals sets a lower bound on glitch duration (~10^{-4} ms).
Provides amplitude scalings as functions of vortex travel distance and stellar angular velocity.
Abstract
The current-quadrupole gravitational-wave signal emitted during the spin-up phase of a pulsar glitch is calculated from first principles by modeling the vortex dynamics observed in recent Gross-Pitaevskii simulations of pinned, decelerating quantum condensates. Homogeneous and inhomogeneous unpinning geometries, representing creep- and avalanche-like glitches, provide lower and upper bounds on the gravitational wave signal strength respectively. The signal arising from homogeneous glitches is found to scale with the square root of glitch size, whereas the signal from inhomogeneous glitches scales proportional to glitch size. The signal is also computed as a function of vortex travel distance and stellar angular velocity. Convenient amplitude scalings are derived as functions of these parameters. For the typical astrophysical situation, where the glitch duration (in units of the spin…
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