TL;DR
This paper models neutron star glitches by linking microphysical vortex interactions to observable glitch dynamics, revealing how different internal coupling strengths influence the glitch rise and recovery, and comparing predictions with pulsar data.
Contribution
It introduces a predictive framework connecting microphysical vortex interactions to macroscopic glitch behavior, highlighting the role of density-dependent mutual friction in neutron star interiors.
Findings
Glitch rise behavior is insensitive to crustal mutual friction for -3
Core coupling strength significantly affects glitch dynamics
Model matches pulse-to-pulse observations of Vela pulsar glitch
Abstract
Pulsar glitches provide a unique way to study neutron star microphysics because short post-glitch dynamics are directly linked to strong frictional processes on small scales. To illustrate this connection between macroscopic observables and microphysics, we review calculations of vortex interactions focusing on Kelvin wave excitations and determine the corresponding mutual friction strength for realistic microscopic parameters in the inner crust. These density-dependent crustal coupling profiles are combined with a simplified treatment of the core coupling and implemented in a three-component neutron star model to construct a predictive framework for glitch rises. As a result of the density-dependent dynamics, we find the superfluid to transfer angular momentum to different parts of the crust and the core on different timescales. This can cause the spin frequency change to become…
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