Radiation from hot bare strange stars
Abstract
We present the results of numerical simulations of stationary, spherically outflowing, pair winds, with total luminosities of L=1035- 1042 ergs/s. These results have direct relevance to the emission from hot, bare, strange stars, which are thought to be powerful sources of electron-positron pairs created by the Coulomb barrier at the quark surface. The spectra of emergent photons and pairs are calculated. For L > 2x1035 erg/s, photons dominate the emerging emission. As L increases from 1035 to 1042 ergs/s, the mean photon energy decreases from ~ 400-500 keV to 40 keV, while the spectrum changes in shape from a wide annihilation line to being nearly blackbody with a high energy (> 100 keV) tail. Such a correlation of the photon spectrum with the luminosity, together with the fact that super-Eddington luminosities can be achieved, might be a good observational signature of hot, bare, strange stars.
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