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Recent work by Rankin & Deshpande strongly suggests that there exist strong ``micro-storms rotating around the magnetic axis of the 1.1s pulsar PSR 0943+10. Such a feature hints that most probably the large-voltage vacuum gap proposed by Ruderman & Sutherland (RS) does exist in the pulsar polar cap. However, there are severe arguments against the formation of the RS-type gap in pulsars, since the binding energies of both the Fe ions and the electrons in a neutron stars surface layer is too small to prevent thermionic ejection of the particles from the surface. Here we propose that PSR 0943+10 (probably also most of the other ``drifting pulsars) might be bare strange stars rather than normal neutron stars, in which the ``binding energy at the surface is merely infinity either for the case of ``pulsar or ``anti-pulsar. It is further proposed that identifying a drifting pulsar as an anti-pulsar is the key criterion to distinguish strange stars from neutron stars.
The photon emissivity from the bremsstrahlung process ee-> eegamma occuring in the electrosphere at the bare surface of a strange quark star is calculated. For surface temperatures T<10^9K, the photon flux exceeds that of e+e- pairs that are produced
A recent X-ray observation has shown that the radio pulsar PSR B0943+10, with clear drifting subpulses, has a much smaller polar cap area than that of conventional pulsars with mass of $simmsun$ and radius of $sim10$ km. Zhang et al. (2005) addressed
PSR J$1946+3417$ is a millisecond pulsar (MSP) with a spin period $Psimeq3.17rm~ms$. Harbored in a binary with an orbital period $P_{rm b}simeq27$ days, the MSP is accompanied by a white dwarf (WD). The masses of the MSP and the WD were determined to
What if normal baryonic matter is compressed so tightly that atomic nuclei come into close contact? This question has been asked since 1930s. The fist answer was presented by Lev Landau whose speculation has been developed, and the concept of neutron
We have identified a new intermediate polar, HS 0943+1404, as part of our ongoing search for cataclysmic variables in the Hamburg Quasar Survey. The orbital and white dwarf spin periods determined from time-resolved photometry and spectroscopy are Po