Maximum elastic deformations of relativistic stars
Nathan K. Johnson-McDaniel, Benjamin J. Owen

TL;DR
This paper develops a relativistic method to calculate the maximum elastic quadrupolar deformations of stars, revealing significant suppression compared to Newtonian estimates, with implications for gravitational wave sources.
Contribution
It generalizes previous Newtonian models to relativistic stars, providing new calculations for maximum deformations across different star types and equations of state.
Findings
Relativistic effects suppress quadrupoles by up to a factor of 6 in crusts.
Maximum quadrupoles can still be very large for certain star models.
Solid quark stars can sustain quadrupoles around 10^44 g cm^2.
Abstract
We present a method for calculating the maximum elastic quadrupolar deformations of relativistic stars, generalizing the previous Newtonian, Cowling approximation integral given by [G. Ushomirsky et al., Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc. 319, 902 (2000)]. (We also present a method for Newtonian gravity with no Cowling approximation.) We apply these methods to the m = 2 quadrupoles most relevant for gravitational radiation in three cases: crustal deformations, deformations of crystalline cores of hadron-quark hybrid stars, and deformations of entirely crystalline color superconducting quark stars. In all cases, we find suppressions of the quadrupole due to relativity compared to the Newtonian Cowling approximation, particularly for compact stars. For the crust these suppressions are up to a factor ~6, for hybrid stars they are up to ~4, and for solid quark stars they are at most ~2, with slight…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
