Are rotating strange quark stars good sources of gravitational waves?

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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15 pages, 10 figures, to appear in Astronomy and Astrophysics

Scientific paper

10.1051/0004-6361:20031431

We study the viscosity driven (Jacobi-like) bar mode instability of rapidly rotating strange stars in general relativity. A triaxial, "bar shaped" compact star could be an efficient source of continuous wave gravitational radiation in the frequency range of the forthcoming interferometric detectors. We locate the secular instability point along several constant baryon mass sequences of uniformly rotating strange stars described by the MIT bag model. Contrary to neutron stars, strange stars with T/|W| (the ratio of the rotational kinetic energy to the absolute value of the gravitational potential energy) much lower than the corresponding value for the mass-shed limit can be secularly unstable to bar mode formation if shear viscosity is high enough to damp out any deviation from uniform rotation. The instability develops for a broad range of gravitational masses and rotational frequencies of strange quark stars. It imposes strong constraints on the lower limit of the frequency at the innermost stable circular orbit around rapidly rotating strange stars. The above results are robust for all linear self-bound equations of state assuming the growth time of the instability is faster than the damping timescale. We discuss astrophysical scenarios where triaxial instabilities (r-mode and viscosity driven instability) could be relevant in strange stars described by the standard MIT bag model of normal quark matter. Taking into account actual values of viscosities in strange quark matter and neglecting the magnetic field we show that Jacobi-like instability cannot develop in any astrophysicaly interesting temperature windows. The main result is that strange quark stars described by the MIT bag model can be accelerated to very high frequency in Low Mass X-ray binaries if the strange quark mass is ~ 200 MeV or higher.

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