A&A 372, 535-543 (2001)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20010510
The crust of rotating strange quark stars
J. L. Zdunik1, P. Haensel1, 2 and E. Gourgoulhon21 N. Copernicus Astronomical Center, Polish Academy of Sciences, Bartycka 18, 00-716 Warszawa, Poland
2 Département d'Astrophysique Relativiste et de Cosmologie -UMR 8629 du CNRS, Observatoire de Paris, 92195 Meudon Cedex, France
e-mail: jlz@camk.edu.pl; haensel@camk.edu.pl; Eric.Gourgoulhon@obspm.fr
(Received 12 January 2001 / Accepted 9 March 2001)
Abstract
Calculations of the properties of rotating strange stars
with crusts are performed within the framework of general
relativity. We employ an equation of state (EOS) of strange quark matter based
on the MIT Bag Model with massive strange quarks and lowest order
QCD interactions. The crust is described by the BPS
equation of state.
A significant increase of the stellar radius is found close to
the Keplerian (mass-shedding limit) configuration. This leads to the
disappearance of the
gap between the stellar surface and the
innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO)
at very high rotation
rates, for a rather broad range of stellar masses. The Keplerian
configuration for the strange star with crust corresponds to
values of J, T/W,
which are
about 20% smaller than in the
case of bare strange stars. Because the Keplerian configuration is
achieved due to the increase of the stellar oblateness, the
Keplerian frequency (of the rotation) remains almost unaltered.
The lack of the gap close to the Keplerian rotation
could imply a
more stringent limit on
, if the existence of such a
gap is supported by observations, as in the source 4U 1820-30 with
the upper QPO frequency 1.07 kHz. If such a constraint is taken into
account (mandatory existence of a gap)
the minimum
is about
1 kHz even with the extreme fine tuning
of strange quark matter parameters.
The minimum
is then obtained for the non-rotating
configuration with maximum allowable mass. The maximum frequency in the stable
circular orbit around the strange star with a crust is smaller by about
100 Hz than in the case of a bare strange star.
During the spin-down of a magnetized strange quark star with crust,
the crust matter is absorbed in the equatorial region
by the strange matter core. The deconfinement
of absorbed crust matter is a strongly exothermic process, which
would influence the cooling curve of this compact object.
Key words: dense matter -- equation of state -- stars: neutron -- stars: rotation -- stars: binaries: general
Offprint request: J. L. Zdunik, jlz@camk.edu.pl
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