|
Ask a Physicist
Would so-called solid quark stars that undergo "glitches" produce gravity
waves due to the changing moment of inertia? Could detection of this be used
to prove or rule out the existence of strange quark stars?
Submitted by Robert from Sunnyvale, California
A "glitch" is what radio astronomers call it when they see a pulsar's
frequency suddenly jump up a little bit. Most of the time the frequency
goes down steadily (and very slowly) because the pulsar is radiating energy
and angular momentum in electromagnetic waves (radio, light, etc) and
gravitational waves. Glitches can't happen to an all-liquid star, so the
observations tell us that part of the star is solid. Basically, something
must have cracked and the structure changed abruptly. That something could
be the solid part itself, or various interactions between the solid and
liquid parts.
Neutron stars should be mostly liquid with a thin solid crust on top. But
some pulsars might be dense enough to be made of quarks mingling freely
rather than confined into the groups of three we call neutrons. The
properties of quark stars are harder to predict than those of neutron stars
(which are already tricky). Quark stars are thought to be mostly gas under
a thin solid crust, but it's possible they're completely solid.
After the abrupt disturbance of a glitch, the whole star should ring like a
bell, and the motion of the matter will produce gravitational waves. The
exact kind of ringing could reveal in principle the structure of the star,
like what fraction is solid and what it's made of. Unfortunately these
signals are too weak to be detected with the present generation of
instruments or even the next generation. Also they don't last very long,
which hurts the detectability of already weak signals.
But Einstein@Home might detect what comes before the glitch. What cracked
might have been a lump in the solid part of the star. If so, it would make
gravitational waves as it spins around, day after day. The long duration
helps us detect that signal, although we need a lot of computing power to
take advantage of it. That's why we ask you folks to join Einstein@Home.
That long-lived signal might indicate if the source is a neutron star or
something else, since the waves from solid quark stars could be a lot
stronger than from neutron stars.
|