Mixed phase in a compact star with strong magnetic field
Ritam Mallick, P. K. Sahu

TL;DR
This paper investigates how strong magnetic fields influence the equation of state and structure of hybrid stars with mixed hadron-quark phases, showing magnetic effects are significant above 10^{14}G and can produce stars matching observed massive pulsars.
Contribution
It introduces a model for hybrid stars with a mixed phase under strong magnetic fields, incorporating density-dependent magnetic effects and Landau quantization, and compares results with recent pulsar observations.
Findings
Magnetic fields soften the EOS of matter phases.
Strong magnetic fields (>10^{14}G) significantly affect the star's properties.
Maximum mass of hybrid stars can reach about 2 solar masses, consistent with observations.
Abstract
Compact stars can have either hadronic matter or can have exotic states of matter like strange quark matter or color superconducting matter. Stars also can have a quark core surrounded by hadronic matter, known as hybrid stars (HS). The HS is likely to have a mixed phase in between the hadron and quark phase. Observational results suggest huge surface magnetic field in certain neutron stars (NS) called magnetars. Here we study the effect of strong magnetic field on the respective EOS of matter under extreme conditions. We further study the hadron-quark phase transition in the interiors of NS giving rise to hybrid stars (HS) in presence of strong magnetic field. The hadronic matter EOS is described based on relativistic mean field theory and we include the effect of strong magnetic fields leading to Landau quantization of the charged particles. For the quark phase we use the simple MIT…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · High-pressure geophysics and materials · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
