Solid Quark Stars?
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It is conjectured that cold quark matter with much high baryon density could be in a solid state, and strange stars with low temperatures should thus be solid stars. The speculation could be close to the truth if no peculiar polarization of thermal X-ray emission (in, e.g., RXJ1856), or no gravitational wave in post-glitch phases, is detected in future advanced facilities, or if spin frequencies beyond the critical ones limited by r-mode instability are discovered. The shear modulus of solid quark matter could be ~ 10^{32} erg/cm^3 if the kHz QPOs observed are relevant to the eigenvalues of the center star oscillations.
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Cited by 1 Pith paper
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Can a Slow and Strong Phase Transition in Neutron Stars Relieve Major Compact-Star Observation Tensions?
Slow strong hadron-quark phase transitions allow stable hybrid-star branches that accommodate both high-mass and low-radius observations in two viable patterns from a parameter scan.
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