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A Q-star, also known as a grey hole, is a hypothetical type of a compact, heavy neutron star with an exotic state of matter. Such a star can be smaller than the progenitor star's Schwarzschild radius and have a gravitational pull so strong that some light, but not all light, cannot escape.[ citation needed] The Q stands for a conserved particle number. A Q-star may be mistaken for a stellar black hole. [1]

Types of Q-stars

  • Q-ball [2]
  • B-ball, stable Q-balls with a large baryon number B. They may exist in neutron stars that have absorbed Q-ball(s). [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ *Miller, J. C.; Shahbaz, T.; Nolan, L. A. (1998). "Are Q-stars a serious threat for stellar-mass black hole candidates?". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 294 (2): L25–L29. arXiv: astro-ph/9708065. Bibcode: 1998MNRAS.294L..25M. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-8711.1998.01384.x.
  2. ^ a b Kusenko, Alexander (2006). Properties and signatures of supersymmetric Q-balls. workshop on Exotic Physics with Neutrino Telescopes. Uppsala, Sweden. arXiv: hep-ph/0612159. Bibcode: 2006hep.ph...12159K.

Further reading