Exploring pathways to forming twin stars
Mahdi Naseri, Gabriele Bozzola, Vasileios Paschalidis

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether twin stars, a hypothesized third family of compact stars resulting from a hadron-quark phase transition, can form through gravitational collapse, using general relativistic simulations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation-based analysis of twin star formation via gravitational collapse, highlighting the conditions and challenges involved.
Findings
Twin stars can form from core collapse with specific initial conditions.
Formation of twin stars is rare due to narrow mass range and fine-tuning requirements.
Simulations show twin stars may result from mass loss in hybrid stars.
Abstract
A viable model for the dense matter equation of state above the nuclear saturation density includes a hadron-to-quark phase transition at densities relevant to compact objects. In this case, stable hybrid hadron-quark stars can arise. An even more interesting scenario is one where the hadron-to-quark phase transition results in the emergence of a third branch of stable compact objects (in addition to white dwarfs and neutron stars). Inherent to the presence of a third family of compact stars is the existence of twin stars - hybrid stars with the same mass as the corresponding neutron stars, but with smaller radii. Interestingly, the neutron star-twin star scenario is consistent with GW170817. If twin stars exist in nature, it raises a question about the mechanism that leads to their formation. Here, we explore gravitational collapse as a pathway to the formation of low-mass twin stars.…
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