2,930 research outputs found

    Non-locality in the nucleon-nucleon interaction and nuclear matter saturation

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    We study the possible relationship between the saturation properties of nuclear matter and the inclusion of non-locality in the nucleon-nucleon interaction. To this purpose we compute the saturation curve of nuclear matter within the Bethe-Brueckner-Goldstone theory using a recently proposed realistic non-local potential, and compare it with the corresponding curves obtained with a purely local realistic interaction (Argonne v18_{18}) and the most recent version of the one-boson exchange potential (CD Bonn). We find that the inclusion of non-locality in the two-nucleon bare interaction strongly affects saturation, but it is unable to provide a consistent description of few-body nuclear systems and nuclear matter.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures; v2: introduction extended, references added, discussion of fig.8 reformulated; to be published in Phys. Rev.

    The maximum and minimum mass of protoneutron stars in the Brueckner theory

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    We study the structure of protoneutron stars within the finite-temperature Brueckner-Bethe-Goldstone theoretical approach, paying particular attention to how it is joined to a low-density nuclear equation of state (EOS). We find a slight sensitivity of the minimum value of the protoneutron star mass on the low-density equation of state, whereas the maximum mass is hardly affected.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure

    Hybrid protoneutron stars with the MIT bag model

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    We study the hadron-quark phase transition in the interior of protoneutron stars. For the hadronic sector, we use a microscopic equation of state involving nucleons and hyperons derived within the finite-temperature Brueckner-Bethe-Goldstone many-body theory, with realistic two-body and three-body forces. For the description of quark matter, we employ the MIT bag model both with a constant and a density-dependent bag parameter. We calculate the structure of protostars with the equation of state comprising both phases and find maximum masses below 1.6 solar masses. Metastable heavy hybrid protostars are not found.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Protoneutron stars within the Brueckner-Bethe-Goldstone theory

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    We study the structure of newly born neutron stars (protoneutron stars) within the finite temperature Brueckner-Bethe-Goldstone theoretical approach including also hyperons. We find that for purely nucleonic stars both finite temperature and neutrino trapping reduce the value of the maximum mass. For hyperonic stars the effect is reversed, because neutrino trapping shifts the appearance of hyperons to larger baryon density and stiffens considerably the equation of state.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysic

    Strange hadronic stellar matter within the Brueckner-Bethe-Goldstone theory

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    In the framework of the non-relativistic Brueckner-Bethe-Goldstone theory, we derive a microscopic equation of state for asymmetric and β\beta-stable matter containing Σ\Sigma^- and Λ\Lambda hyperons. We mainly study the effects of three-body forces (TBFs) among nucleons on the hyperon formation and the equation of state (EoS). We find that, when TBFs are included, the stellar core is almost equally populated by nucleons and hyperons. The resulting EoS, which turns out to be extremely soft, has been used in order to calculate the static structure of neutron stars. We obtain a value of the maximum mass of 1.26 solar masses (1 solar mass Mo1.991033gM_o \simeq 1.99 \cdot 10^{33} g). Stellar rotations increase this value by about 12%.Comment: 4 pages, Latex, 2 figures included. To appear in the Proceedings of '' Bologna 2000 - Structure of the Nucleus at the Dawn of the Century'', May 29- June 3, 2000, Bologna, Ital
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