81 research outputs found

    Electromagnetic Effects in Superconductors in Gravitational Field

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    The general relativistic modifications to the resistive state in superconductors of second type in the presence of a stationary gravitational field are studied. Some superconducting devices that can measure the gravitational field by its red-shift effect on the frequency of radiation are suggested. It has been shown that by varying the orientation of a superconductor with respect to the earth gravitational field, a corresponding varying contribution to AC Josephson frequency would be added by gravity. A magnetic flux (being proportional to angular velocity of rotation Ω\Omega) through a rotating hollow superconducting cylinder with the radial gradient of temperature ∇rT\nabla_r T is theoretically predicted. The magnetic flux is assumed to be produced by the azimuthal current arising from Coriolis force effect on radial thermoelectric current. Finally the magnetic flux through the superconducting ring with radial heat flow located at the equatorial plane interior the rotating neutron star is calculated. In particular it has been shown that nonvanishing magnetic flux will be generated due to the general relativistic effect of dragging of inertial frames on the thermoelectric current.Comment: 11 pages 2 figure

    General Relativistic Magnetospheres of Slowly Rotating and Oscillating Magnetized Neutron Stars

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    We study the magnetosphere of a slowly rotating magnetized neutron star subject to toroidal oscillations in the relativistic regime. Under the assumption of a zero inclination angle between the magnetic moment and the angular momentum of the star, we analyze the Goldreich-Julian charge density and derive a second-order differential equation for the electrostatic potential. The analytical solution of this equation in the polar cap region of the magnetosphere shows the modification induced by stellar toroidal oscillations on the accelerating electric field and on the charge density. We also find that, after decomposing the oscillation velocity in terms of spherical harmonics, the first few modes with m=0,1m=0,1 are responsible for energy losses that are almost linearly dependent on the amplitude of the oscillation and that, for the mode (l,m)=(2,1)(l,m)=(2,1), can be a factor ∼8\sim8 larger than the rotational energy losses, even for a velocity oscillation amplitude at the star surface as small as η=0.05 Ω R\eta=0.05 \ \Omega \ R. The results obtained in this paper clarify the extent to which stellar oscillations are reflected in the time variation of the physical properties at the surface of the rotating neutron star, mainly by showing the existence of a relation between PP˙P\dot{P} and the oscillation amplitude. Finally, we propose a qualitative model for the explanation of the phenomenology of intermittent pulsars in terms of stellar oscillations that are periodically excited by star glitches.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, submitted to MNRA
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