Dynamical response of twin stars to perturbations
Shamim Haque, Luciano Rezzolla, Ritam Mallick

TL;DR
This study uses general-relativistic simulations to analyze how twin stars with different internal compositions respond to perturbations, revealing which configurations are more likely to be observed in nature.
Contribution
It introduces a method to determine the more probable twin-star configuration based on critical perturbation thresholds and binding energies, challenging previous assumptions.
Findings
Stars on different branches have distinct critical perturbation strengths.
The branch with the larger critical perturbation is more likely to be observed.
Binding energies can predict the preferred stellar configuration without simulations.
Abstract
If a strong first-order phase transition takes place at sufficiently high rest-mass densities in the equation of state (EOS) modelling compact stars, a new branch will appear in the mass-radius sequence of stable equilibria. This branch will be populated by stars comprising a quark-matter core and a hadronic-matter envelope, i.e., hybrid stars, which represent ``twin-star'' solutions to equilibria having the same mass but a fully hadronic EOS. While both branches are stable to linear perturbations, it is unclear which of the twin solutions is the ``favoured'' one, that is, which of the two configurations is expected to be found in nature. We assess this point by performing a large campaign of general-relativistic simulations aimed at assessing the response of compact stars on the two branches to perturbations of various strength. In this way, we find that, independently of whether the…
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