The scenario of two families of compact stars 2. Transition from hadronic to quark matter and explosive phenomena
Alessandro Drago, Giuseppe Pagliara

TL;DR
This paper explores the transition of hadronic to quark matter in compact stars, its rapid two-phase process, and implications for gamma-ray bursts and supernovae, highlighting new links between quark deconfinement and astrophysical phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed two-phase model of hadronic to quark star transition and connects quark deconfinement to observable gamma-ray burst features and supernova explosions.
Findings
Rapid transition phase lasts a few milliseconds.
Second phase lasts about ten seconds involving strangeness diffusion.
Quark deconfinement may explain features of long and short GRBs.
Abstract
We will follow the two-families scenario described in the accompanying paper, in which compact stars having a very small radius and masses not exceeding about 1.5 are made of hadrons, while more massive compact stars are quark stars. In the present paper we discuss the dynamics of the transition of a hadronic star into a quark star. We will show that the transition takes place in two phases: a very rapid one, lasting a few milliseconds, during which the central region of the star converts into quark matter and the process of conversion is accelerated by the existence of strong hydrodynamical instabilities, and a second phase, lasting about ten seconds, during which the process of conversion proceeds till the surface of the star via production and diffusion of strangeness. We will show that these two steps play a crucial role in the phenomenological implications of the model. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Neutrino Physics Research
