Because neutrons and protons consist of quarks, their magnetic moments differ from the so-called nuclear magneton (the natural unit for expressing magnetic dipole moments of nucleons). A neutron has a finite magnetic dipole moment (possibly even an electric dipole moment) despite being electrically neutral: this is because its internal structure consists of electrically charged quarks. Therefore, a neutron could be accelerated by electromagnetic fields - at least a tiny little bit - even if its electric monopole is zero. Moreover, it should radiate photons when accelerated, even though this effect is likely to be extremely small.
Question: Does the same kind of radiation should also be expected for the colour charge? The "colour monopole" of a nucleon should always be zero, as the electric monopole of a neutron. However, can a "colour dipole" be defined for a nucleon? Will nucleons radiate gluons if accelerated?
Note: I am trying to push the analogy with the neutron that radiates photons despite being neutral: by analogy, we could expect nucleons to radiate gluons despite being "colour neutral". I suspect that this is impossible because the ninth colourless gluon does not exist, see also this question.
Edit: It seems so, at least according to this paper. However, I do not grasp the technical details. Maybe someone could comment on this reference and explain if it is relevant.