Testing the deep-crustal heating model using quiescent neutron-star very-faint X-ray transients and the possibility of partially accreted crusts in accreting neutron stars
Rudy Wijnands, Nathalie Degenaar, Dany Page

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether very-faint X-ray transients can test the deep-crustal heating model in neutron stars, highlighting uncertainties in accretion history and the potential presence of hybrid crusts affecting thermal properties.
Contribution
It explores the impact of hybrid crusts on neutron star heating and cooling, and assesses the viability of using VFXTs to test the deep-crustal heating model.
Findings
Uncertainties in accretion history hinder conclusive testing of the model.
Hybrid crusts may influence thermal conductivity and cooling behavior.
VFXTs are unlikely to dominate low-luminosity X-ray sources in globular clusters.
Abstract
It is assumed that accreting neutron stars (NSs) in LMXBs are heated due to the compression of the existing crust by the accreted matter which gives rise to nuclear reactions in the crust. It has been shown that most of the energy is released deep in the crust by pycnonuclear reactions involving low-Z elements. We discuss if NSs in very-faint X-ray transients (VFXTs; those which have peak X-ray luminosities < 1E36 erg/s) can be used to test this model. Unfortunately we cannot conclusively answer this because of the large uncertainties in our estimates of the accretion rate history of those VFXTs, both the short-term (less than a few tens of thousands of years) and the one throughout their lifetime. The latter is important because it can be so low that the NSs might not have accreted enough matter to become massive enough that enhanced cooling processes become active. Therefore, they…
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