The micro-glitch in PSR B1821-24 : A case for a strange pulsar?
Abstract
The single glitch observed in PSR B1821-24, a millisecond pulsar in M28, is unusual on two counts. First, the magnitude of this glitch is at least an order of magnitude smaller ( / 10-11) than the smallest glitch observed to date. Secondly, all other glitching pulsars have strong magnetic fields with B 1011 G and are young, whereas PSR B1821-24 is an old recycled pulsar with a field strength of 2.25×109 G. We have suggested earlier that some of the recycled pulsars could actually be strange quark stars. In this work we argue that the crustal properties of such a strange pulsar are just right to give rise to a glitch of this magnitude, explaining the scarcity of larger glitches in millisecond pulsars.
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