Ocean g-modes on transient neutron stars
Alex Deibel

TL;DR
This paper predicts how accretion and cooling in neutron star oceans affect g-mode oscillation frequencies, providing a potential explanation for observed low-frequency quasi-periodic oscillations during different accretion states.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking accretion-driven heating and cooling to the evolution of ocean g-mode frequencies in transient neutron stars, offering observational tests for g-mode origins.
Findings
Predicted g-mode frequencies range from 3 to 7 Hz for typical accretion rates.
Shallow heating increases predicted g-mode frequencies up to 16 Hz.
Observations of 8-16 Hz oscillations support a g-mode explanation.
Abstract
The neutron star ocean is a plasma of ions and electrons that extends from the base of the neutron star's envelope to a depth where the plasma crystallizes into a solid crust. During an accretion outburst in an X-ray transient, material accumulates in the envelope of the neutron star primary. This accumulation compresses the neutron star's outer layers and induces nuclear reactions in the ocean and crust. Accretion-driven heating raises the ocean's temperature and increases the frequencies of g-modes in the ocean; when accretion halts, the ocean cools and ocean g-mode frequencies decrease. If the observed low-frequency quasi-periodic oscillations on accreting neutron stars are g-modes in the ocean, the observed quasi-periodic oscillation frequencies will increase during outburst---reaching a maximum when the ocean temperature reaches steady state --- and subsequently decrease during…
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