Nonlinear Development of the R Mode Instability and the Maximum Rotation Rate of Neutron Stars
Ruxandra Bondarescu (University of Zurich), Ira Wasserman (Cornell, University)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how nonlinear R mode instability affects the maximum spin rate of neutron stars, suggesting that lower boundary layer dissipation allows for higher spin frequencies, potentially up to 750 Hz.
Contribution
It introduces a new model of R mode saturation considering boundary layer dissipation and estimates the maximum attainable spin frequency of neutron stars.
Findings
R mode instability limits neutron star spin-up to about 300 Hz with high boundary layer damping.
Reduced boundary layer damping allows spin-up to frequencies around 750 Hz.
R modes are potentially unstable in all millisecond pulsars regardless of accretion status.
Abstract
We describe how the nonlinear development of the R mode instability of neutron stars influences spin up to millisecond periods via accretion. Our arguments are based on nearly-resonant interactions of the R mode with pairs of "daughter modes". The amplitude of the R mode saturates at the lowest value for which parametric instability leads to significant excitation of a particular pair of daughters. The lower bound on this limiting amplitude is proportional to the damping rate of the daughter modes that are excited parametrically. Based on this picture, we show that if modes damp because of dissipation in a very thin boundary layer at the crust-core boundary then spin up to frequencies larger than about 300 Hz does not occur. Within this conventional scenario the R mode saturates at an amplitude that is too large for angular momentum gain from accretion to overcome gravitational loss to…
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