What follows is a guide to the organization of the 3 data files available for each equation of state discussed in the masters thesis by Richard D Mellinger Jr at San Diego State University (Spring 2016). This data is also discussed and can be found at the following URL: http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~fweber/Mellinger/Compositions.html For each equation of state, if we call it [Eos Name], then the 3 data files in question are [Eos Name].dat, [Eos Name]_OmVsR.txt, and [Eos Name]_fvsA.txt. These 3 files can be found below all 6 figures for each equation of state on the above mentioned website. A zip file of all the data can also be downloaded from https://www.dropbox.com/s/uzwdgd0stw5h35r/Final_Plots.zip. [Eos Name].dat: The equation of state. The columns are Energy Density (MeV/fm^3), Pressure (MeV/fm^3), Baryon Number Density (fm^-3) [Eos Name]_OmVsR.txt: This is the numerical data that was used to generate the Equatorial and Polar Particle Plots. It is organized as follows: Baryon number Kepler frequency Number of frequencies explored The number of phases that appeared The number of particles that appeared The frequencies explored (rad/s) The gravitational mass determined for each frequency (solar masses) The equatorial radius of the surface for each frequency (km) The polar radius of the surface for each frequency (km) Then, for both the equatorial and polar radii, the maximum radii where different phases are found is given in km, followed by the frequency in units of kepler frequencies (a neutron star spinning with its Kepler frequency would have a 1 here). After the phases, the same form is followed for each particle that appeared. [Eos Name]_fvsA.txt: The numerical data used to create the plot labeled fvsA. It is organized as follows: Dimensions, Number of baryon numbers "x" Number of frequencies A list of the log of the baryon numbers considered The Kepler frequency for a neutron star with each baryon number A list of the frequencies considered in units of Kepler frequencies. An array containing the central density for each baryon number and frequency. This is what was plotted as a colored surface in fvsA. This is followed by information used to locate the dip, as discussed in section 4.1 First is the baryon number Second is the highest frequency for each baryon number where the derivative of density as a function of frequency goes from positive to negative (0 if none found). Third is the central density that corresponds to each frequency mentioned immediately above.