Relating Braking Indices of Young Pulsars to the Dynamics of Superfluid Cores
H. O. Oliveira, N. S. Magalhaes, R. M. Marinho Jr., G. A. Carvalho, C., Frajuca

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new model linking pulsar braking indices to the dynamics of superfluid cores, suggesting that changes in the star's moment of inertia due to superfluid vortex creep can explain observed deviations from canonical predictions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach connecting pulsar frequency decay to superfluid vortex dynamics, improving understanding of pulsar spin-down behavior.
Findings
Model yields braking indices close to observed values.
Variation in the displacement parameter aligns with superfluid vortex creep.
Supports future complex models with superfluid interiors.
Abstract
Pulsars are stars that emit electromagnetic radiation in well-defined time intervals. The frequency of such pulses decays with time as is quantified by the {\it braking index} (). In the canonical model for all pulsars, but observational data show that , indicating a limitation of the model. In this work we present a new approach to study the frequency decay of the rotation of a pulsar, based on an adaptation of the canonical one. We consider the pulsar a star that rotates in vacuum and has a strong magnetic field but, differently from the canonical model, we assume that its moment of inertia changes in time due to a uniform variation of a displacement parameter in time. We found that the braking index results smaller than the canonical value as a consequence of an increase in the star's displacement parameter, whose variation is small enough to allow plausible…
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