Systematic study of the morphology and length of slow stable hybrid star branches
Abstract
We introduce and systematically study the length of the slow stable hybrid star branch as a quantitative measure of the extended stability region that arises in hybrid neutron stars when the hadron-quark phase conversion is slow compared to the radial oscillation timescale. Combining generalized piecewise-polytropic hadronic equations of state of varying stiffness with a constant-speed-of-sound quark-matter model, we construct a large set of hybrid equations of state spanning a broad range of transition pressures, energy-density jumps, and quark-matter speeds of sound. We identify four morphological types for the slow stable branch in the mass-radius plane: waterfall branches that descend monotonically from the hadronic maximum mass, bridges that connect the hadronic branch to a second unconditionally stable hybrid branch, tails that extend briefly beyond the maximum mass of an unconditionally stable hybrid branch, and tail-bridges that combine features of the latter two. Their prevalence is governed primarily by the transition pressure and the energy-density jump, while the branch length is also significantly influenced by the stiffness of the hadronic sector and the quark-matter speed of sound. Imposing current astrophysical and microphysical constraints shows that viable long branches are predominantly of waterfall type, and that stiff hadronic equations of state -- strongly disfavored under the rapid-conversion assumption -- remain compatible with all current constraints within the slow-conversion framework. In the plane of transition baryon density versus density jump, slow stable configurations open a new region of viable parameter space inaccessible under rapid conversions.
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