A window into the neutron star: Modelling the cooling of accretion heated neutron star crusts
M. J. P. Wijngaarden, R. Wijnands, L. S. Ootes, A. S. Parikh, D. Page

TL;DR
This paper models the cooling of neutron star crusts after short accretion outbursts, revealing unusual crustal properties like very low thermal conductivity, and compares predictions with observational data from multiple sources.
Contribution
It applies a theoretical model to short-duration accretion outbursts, providing new insights into crust properties and long-term cooling behavior of neutron stars.
Findings
Long-lived hot crust implies very low thermal conductivity.
Crust cooling observed years after short outbursts.
Model predictions align with observed cooling curves.
Abstract
In accreting neutron star X-ray transients, the neutron star crust can be substantially heated out of thermal equilibrium with the core during an accretion outburst. The observed subsequent cooling in quiescence (when accretion has halted) offers a unique opportunity to study the structure and thermal properties of the crust. Initially crust cooling modelling studies focussed on transient X-ray binaries with prolonged accretion outbursts (> 1 year) such that the crust would be significantly heated for the cooling to be detectable. Here we present the results of applying a theoretical model to the observed cooling curve after a short accretion outburst of only ~10 weeks. In our study we use the 2010 outburst of the transiently accreting 11 Hz X-ray pulsar in the globular cluster Terzan 5. Observationally it was found that the crust in this source was still hot more than 4 years after the…
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