Small glitches: the role of strange nuggets?
X. Y. Lai, R. X. Xu

TL;DR
This paper explores the hypothesis that small pulsar glitches may be caused by collisions with strange nuggets, relics of dark matter, and finds that observed small glitches are consistent with such collision rates.
Contribution
It proposes a novel explanation for small pulsar glitches involving dark matter strange nuggets and correlates glitch data with collision rate predictions.
Findings
Small glitches may result from pulsar-strange nugget collisions.
Observed small glitch incidences align with predicted collision rates.
Future observations could test the strange nugget collision hypothesis.
Abstract
Pulsar glitches, i.e. the sudden spin-ups of pulsars, have been detected for most pulsars that we known. The mechanism giving rise to this kind of phenomenon is uncertain, although a large data set has been built. In the framework of star-quake model, based on~\cite{Baym1971}, the glitch-sizes (the relative increases of spin-frequencies during glitches) depend on the released energies during glitches, with less released energies corresponding to smaller glitch sizes. On the other hand, as one of dark matter candidates, our Galaxy might be filled with the so called strange nuggets (SNs) which are the relics from the early Universe. In this case the collisions between pulsars and SNs is inevitable, and these collisions would lead to glitches when enough elastic energy has been accumulated during the spin-down process. The SNs-triggered glitches could release less…
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