Fastest spinning millisecond pulsars: indicators for quark matter in neutron stars?
Christoph G\"artlein, Violetta Sagun, Oleksii Ivanytskyi, David Blaschke, Ilidio Lopes

TL;DR
This study investigates how a phase transition to quark matter in neutron stars affects their maximum mass, radius, and rotational properties, providing insights into the dense matter equation of state and explaining the fastest spinning pulsars.
Contribution
It introduces a hybrid equation of state with a phase transition to quark matter and analyzes its impact on rotating neutron star properties, aligning models with observed fast-spinning pulsars.
Findings
Hybrid stars with quark cores can explain the fastest spinning neutron stars.
Phase transition alters empirical relations between mass, radius, and spin frequency.
Incorporating quark matter constrains neutron star radii and dense matter properties.
Abstract
We study rotating hybrid stars, with a particular emphasis on the effect of a deconfinement phase transition on their properties at high spin. Our analysis is based on a hybrid equation of state (EoS) with a phase transition from hypernuclear matter to color-superconducting quark matter, where both phases are described within a relativistic density functional approach. By varying the vector meson and diquark couplings in the quark matter phase, we obtain different hybrid star sequences with varying extension of the quark matter core, ensuring consistency with astrophysical constraints from mass, radius and tidal deformability measurements. As a result, we demonstrate the impact of an increasing rotational frequency on the maximum gravitational mass, the central energy density of compact stars, the appearance of the quasi-radial oscillations and non-axisymmetric instabilities. We…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
