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The Question

(Submitted April 12, 2002)

Recently I read an article about a new type of star. They call it a strange quark star. It is like a neutron star (composed of neutrons) except it is made of quarks. The article said that there was one detected 400 light-yrs away. Is this actually true? do you have any other information on the subject?

The Answer

This is quite an interesting discovery. I may be misrepresenting it slightly, as I haven't read the whole paper, but I would say the big discovery here is that the star in question appears to be as massive as a neutron star but smaller in diameter than a neutron star can be.

Possible answers are that the diameter is not as small as we think, neutron stars can in fact be much smaller (which would mean we have a big misunderstanding of the equation of state of neutron matter), or that it's a new form of matter. If the last, quark matter seems an obvious candidate. Quark matter has been seen at CERN:

http://press.web.cern.ch/CERN/Announcements/2000/NewStateMatter/story.html

This is all very new, and may turn out to be incorrect. There aren't any theories yet about precisely how a quark star would form. However, it's certainly safe to say that there will be many very soon. Stay tuned!

Hope that helps.

-Kevin Boyce and Martin Still
for "Ask a High Energy Astronomer"

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