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arxiv: 2606.29510 · v1 · pith:K254BWZEnew · submitted 2026-06-28 · 🌀 gr-qc · astro-ph.HE· astro-ph.SR

Radial oscillations of quark stars in light of current astrophysical constraints: A comparative study

Pith reviewed 2026-06-30 02:18 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌀 gr-qc astro-ph.HEastro-ph.SR
keywords quark starsradial oscillationsequation of stategeneral relativitygravitational wavesNICER observationsstrange matterasteroseismology
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The pith

Three equations of state for strange quark stars satisfy current mass, radius, and low-mass constraints while producing radial oscillation frequencies in the four to seven kilohertz range.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper examines the structure and radial oscillations of strange quark stars in general relativity using three different equations of state for quark matter. By solving the equilibrium and perturbation equations, it shows that all three models produce stars with maximum masses above two solar masses and radii of ten to twelve kilometers at canonical masses, consistent with observations from NICER and pulsar timing. The fundamental radial mode frequencies range from four to seven kilohertz, falling within the sensitivity of current and future gravitational wave detectors. These frequencies differ in their large separations among the models, potentially allowing distinction from hadronic neutron stars. The models also naturally explain the sub-solar mass compact object observed in HESS J1731-347.

Core claim

All three equations of state for strange quark matter yield maximum masses exceeding two solar masses with canonical mass radii of ten to twelve kilometers. The fundamental radial oscillation frequencies span four to seven kilohertz, with model-dependent asymptotic large separations. These properties satisfy multimessenger constraints and place the oscillation modes in the detection band of gravitational wave observatories, providing potential signatures to identify strange quark stars.

What carries the argument

The Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff equation for stellar equilibrium and the radial perturbation equations in general relativity, applied to the color-flavor-locked, interacting quark matter, and linear causal equations of state.

If this is right

  • Quark stars can reach masses above two solar masses while having compact radii of ten to twelve kilometers at one point four solar masses.
  • Radial mode frequencies lie in the four to seven kilohertz band accessible to gravitational wave detectors.
  • Different equations of state produce distinct asymptotic large frequency separations.
  • Self-bound quark matter can account for the low-mass compact object in HESS J1731-347.
  • The oscillation properties offer potential asteroseismic signatures to distinguish strange quark stars from hadronic neutron stars in post-merger emission.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Observed kHz gravitational wave signals matching these frequencies and separations could favor quark star models in future multimessenger data.
  • Extending the models to include slow rotation would test whether the reported frequencies remain stable under more realistic conditions.
  • The model-to-model differences in large separations could serve as a diagnostic to select among quark matter equations of state once detections occur.

Load-bearing premise

The three selected equations of state are assumed to sufficiently represent the behavior of strange quark matter in the absence of rotation, magnetic fields, or a nuclear crust.

What would settle it

Detection of a compact object with mass below the minimum allowed by these equations of state or radial oscillation frequencies outside the four to seven kilohertz range in gravitational wave data would challenge the models.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2606.29510 by A. Rincon, G. Panotopoulos, I. Lopes.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Mass-to-radius relationships for the three EoSs considered in this work. In addition, there are four contour plots corresponding to: a) the light HESS compact object (purple region) [75], b) the pulsar J0740+6620 (cyan region) [68,69], c) the pulsar J0030+0451 (red region), [73], and d) the pulsar J0437-4715 (orange region) [74]. The intensity of the color represents 65%, 90% and 99% confidence levels (CLs… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Top row: Large frequency separations versus frequency for the CFL EoS for three different masses M = 1.4 M⊙ (left), M = 2.0 M⊙ (Middle) and M = 0.77 M⊙ (right). At higher excited modes the separation tends to a constant value, ∆ν∞ = 6.20 kHz (left), ∆ν∞ = 5.18 kHz (middle) and finally ∆ν∞ = 8.14 kHz (right). Middle panel: Same as before, but for the interacting EoS. This time at higher excited modes the as… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

We investigate the structural and oscillatory properties of isotropic strange quark stars within General Relativity, focusing on three physically motivated equations of state: the color flavor locked (CFL) phase, an interacting quark matter model, and a linear (causal) equation of state. By numerically solving the Tolman Oppenheimer Volkoff and radial perturbation equations, we construct equilibrium stellar sequences and compute oscillation spectra across three representative masses (0.77, 1.40, and 2.00 solar masses). Our analysis is focused on two diagnostics: (i) mass to radius profiles and (ii) radial mode eigenfrequencies with large frequency separations. We compare theoretical predictions against multimessenger constraints from NICER X ray timing of key pulsars, the massive pulsars at two solar masses, and the low mass compact object in HESS J1731--347. All three equations of state yield maximum masses exceeding 2 solar masses with canonical mass radii of (10--12) km, satisfying current observational bounds. Fundamental mode frequencies span (4--7) kHz, with asymptotic large separations differing among the models. These elevated frequencies lie within the detection band of current and next generation gravitational-wave observatories, offering potential asteroseismic signatures for distinguishing strange quark stars from hadronic neutron stars in post merger emission. Our results demonstrate that self bound quark matter naturally accommodates the sub solar mass configuration of HESS J1731--347, reinforcing the viability of strange quark star interpretations.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript numerically solves the Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff (TOV) equation and the equations for radial stellar perturbations in general relativity for three equations of state describing strange quark matter: the color-flavor-locked (CFL) phase, an interacting quark matter model, and a linear causal EOS. Equilibrium sequences are constructed and radial mode eigenfrequencies are computed for representative masses of 0.77, 1.40, and 2.00 solar masses. The resulting mass-radius relations and frequency spectra (fundamental modes 4-7 kHz, with model-dependent asymptotic large separations) are compared against multimessenger constraints from NICER, the 2 M⊙ pulsars, and the low-mass object in HESS J1731-347. The central claim is that all three EOS satisfy current bounds (maximum masses >2 M⊙, canonical radii 10-12 km) and that the oscillation properties offer potential asteroseismic signatures for distinguishing strange quark stars in gravitational-wave observations.

Significance. If the numerical results hold, the paper provides a useful comparative benchmark showing that self-bound quark-matter models can accommodate the full range of current observational constraints, including the sub-solar-mass configuration of HESS J1731-347. The reported kHz frequencies lie in the band accessible to current and next-generation gravitational-wave detectors, and the emphasis on large frequency separations supplies a concrete, falsifiable diagnostic. Credit is given for employing standard, externally validated GR equations together with previously published EOS rather than introducing new free parameters or ad-hoc entities.

minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract states that 'asymptotic large separations differing among the models' but does not quantify the differences or point to the specific table/figure that reports them; a single sentence or parenthetical reference would improve clarity for readers scanning the summary.
  2. [Methods (assumed §3 or equivalent)] The description of the numerical scheme used to integrate the radial perturbation equations (boundary conditions, shooting method tolerances, or convergence checks) is not detailed in the provided text; adding a short paragraph on numerical accuracy would strengthen reproducibility without altering the central claims.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the positive assessment of our comparative study on radial oscillations in strange quark stars and for recommending minor revision. The report correctly identifies the scope of our numerical work with the TOV and perturbation equations for the three EOS models, as well as the comparison to NICER, 2 M⊙ pulsar, and HESS J1731-347 constraints. No major comments were raised in the report.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; standard GR equations applied to external EOS models

full rationale

The paper constructs stellar models by numerically integrating the standard Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff equation and the linear radial perturbation equations of general relativity for three externally published equations of state (CFL, interacting quark matter, linear causal). Equilibrium sequences and eigenfrequencies are computed directly from these inputs and compared against independent multimessenger observations (NICER, 2 M⊙ pulsars, HESS J1731-347). No parameter is fitted inside the paper and then relabeled as a prediction, no self-citation supplies a uniqueness theorem or ansatz that the central result depends upon, and the reported frequencies and mass-radius relations do not reduce to the input EOS by algebraic identity. The derivation chain is therefore self-contained against external benchmarks.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

Only the abstract is available; specific free parameters inside the three EOS, any ad-hoc assumptions in the perturbation setup, and invented entities cannot be audited from the provided text.

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Reference graph

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