Repeating Fast Radio Bursts from Collapse of Strange Star Crust [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2103.04165


In this work, we suggest that the intriguing repeating fast radio bursts (FRBs) are produced by the intermittent fractional collapses of strange star (SS) crust induced by refilling of accretion materials from its low-mass companion. Coherent radio emissions are released along the open field lines of the magnetosphere at a distance of roughly 100 times that of SS radius. Its periodic/sporadic/clustered temporal behaviors could be well understood in our scenario. Especially, the periodicity is attributed to the modulation of accretion rate through the disk instabilities (e.g., thermal-viscous instability). To account for a $\sim 16$-day periodicity of the repeating FRB source 180916.J0158+65, a Shakura-Sunyaev disk with a viscosity parameter of $\alpha \simeq 0.004$ and an accretion rate of $\simeq 3 \times 10^{16}$~g~s$^{-1}$ in the low state is invoked. Monitoring the face-on low-mass X-ray binaries is strongly encouraged for future repeating FRB searches. Our scenario, if favored by future observations, will serve as indirect evidence for the strange quark matter hypothesis.

Read this paper on arXiv…

J. Geng, B. Li and Y. Huang
Tue, 9 Mar 21
12/68

Comments: 7 pages, 2 figures, comments welcome