456 research outputs found
Pulsar Kicks With Modified URCA and Electrons in Landau Levels
We derive the energy asymmetry given the proto-neutron star during the time
when the neutrino sphere is near the surface of the proto-neutron star, using
the modified URCA process. The electrons produced with the anti-neutrinos are
in Landau levels due to the strong magnetic field, and this leads to asymmetry
in the neutrino momentum, and a pulsar kick. The magnetic field must be strong
enough for a large fraction of the eletrons to be in the lowest Landau level,
however, there is no direct dependence of our pulsar velocity on the strength
of the magnetic field. Our main prediction is that the large pulsar kicks start
at about 10 s and last for about 10 s, with the corresponding neutrinos
correlated in the direction of the magnetic field. We predict a pulsar velocity
of 1.03 km/s, which reaches 1000 km/s if T
K.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Pulsar kicks and dark matter from a sterile neutrino
The observed velocities of radio pulsars, which range in the hundreds
kilometers per second, and many of which exceed 1000 km/s, are not explained by
the standard physics of the supernova explosion. However, if a sterile neutrino
with mass in the 1-20 keV range exists, it would be emitted asymmetrically from
a cooling neutron star, which could give it a sufficient recoil to explain the
pulsar motions. The same particle can be the cosmological dark mater. Future
observations of X-ray telescopes and gravitational wave detectors can confirm
or rule out this explanation.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure; invited talk at the Coral Gables Conference
(CG2003), Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, December 17-21, 200
Pulsar Kicks With Sterile Neutrinos and Landau Levels
We use a model with two sterile neutrinos obtained by fits to the MiniBoone
and LSND experiments. Using formulations with neutrinos created by URCA
Processes in a strong magnetic field, so the lowest Landau level has a sizable
probability, we find that with known paramenters the assymetric sterile
neutrino emissivity might account for large pulsar kicks.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figur
Supernovae, Landau Levels, and Pulsar Kicks
We derive the energy asymmetry given the proto-neutronstar during the time
when the neutrino sphere is near the surface of the proto-neutron star, using
the modified URCA process. The electrons produced with the anti-neutrinos are
in Landau levels due to the strong magnetic field, and this leads to asymmetry
in the neutrino momentum, and a pulsar kick. Our main prediction is that the
large pulsar kicks start at about 10 s and last for about 10 s, with the
corresponding neutrinos correlated in the direction of the magnetic field.Comment: 10 pages, seven figure
Parity Violation in Neutrino Transport and the Origin of Pulsar Kicks
In proto-neutron stars with strong magnetic fields, the neutrino-nucleon
scattering/absorption cross sections depend on the direction of neutrino
momentum with respect to the magnetic field axis, a manifestation of parity
violation in weak interactions. We study the deleptonization and thermal
cooling (via neutrino emission) of proto-neutron stars in the presence of such
asymmetric neutrino opacities. Significant asymmetry in neutrino emission is
obtained due to multiple neutrino-nucleon scatterings. For an ordered magnetic
field threading the neutron star interior, the fractional asymmetry in neutrino
emission is about , corresponding to a pulsar kick velocity
of about km/s for a total radiated neutrino energy of
erg.Comment: AASTeX, 10 pages including 2 ps figures; ApJ Letter in press (March
10, 1998). Shortened to agree with the published versio
Effects of neutrino-driven kicks on the supernova explosion mechanism
We show that neutrino-driven pulsar kicks can increase the energy of the
supernova shock. The observed large velocities of pulsars are believed to
originate in the supernova explosion, either from asymmetries in the ejecta or
from an anisotropic emission of neutrinos (or other light particles) from the
cooling neutron star. In this paper we assume the velocities are caused by
anisotropic neutrino emission and study the effects of these neutrino-driven
kicks on the supernova explosion. We find that if the collapsed star is
marginally unable to produce an explosion, the neutrino-driven mechanisms can
drive the convection to make a successful explosion. The resultant explosion is
asymmetric, with the strongest ejecta motion roughly in the direction of the
neutron star kick. This is in sharp contrast with the ejecta-driven mechanisms,
which predict the motion of the ejecta in the opposite direction. This
difference can be used to distinguish between the two mechanisms based on the
observations of the supernova remnants.Comment: 22 pages including 8 figures, submitted to ApJ, version with high
resolution figures can be found at http://qso.lanl.gov/~cl
Can Parity Violation in Neutrino Transport Lead to Pulsar Kicks?
In magnetized proto-neutron stars, neutrino cross sections depend
asymmetrically on the neutrino momenta due to parity violation. However, these
asymmetric opacities do not induce any asymmetric flux in the bulk interior of
the star where neutrinos are nearly in thermal equilibrium. Consequently,
parity violation in neutrino absorption and scattering can only give rise to
asymmetric neutrino flux above the neutrino-matter decoupling layer. The kick
velocity is substantially reduced from previous estimates, requiring a dipole
field ~G to get of order a few hundred km~s.Comment: REVTEX, 4 pages, no figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. Letter
On the Possible Enhancement of the Magnetic Field by Neutrino Reemission Processes in the Mantle of a Supernova
URCA neutrino reemission processes under the conditions in the mantle of a
supernova with a strong toroidal magnetic field are investigated. It is shown
that parity violation in these processes can be manifested macroscopically as a
torque that rapidly spins up the region of the mantle occupied by such a field.
Neutrino spin-up of the mantle can strongly affect the mechanism of further
generation of the toroidal field, specifically, it can enhance the field in a
small neighborhood of the rigid-body-rotating core of the supernova remnant.Comment: 8 pages, late
Spin-down of neutron stars by neutrino emission
We study the spin-down of a neutron star during its early stages due to the
neutrino emission. The mechanism we consider is the subsequent collisions of
the produced neutrinos with the outer shells of the star. We find that this
mechanism can indeed slow down the star rotation but only in the first tens of
seconds of the core formation, which is when the appropriate conditions of flux
and collision rate are met. We find that this mechanism can extract less than 1
% of the star angular momentum, a result which is much less than previously
estimated by other authors.Comment: 9 pages, 2 eps figures, RevTeX 4-1. The paper was significantly
modified. Now it addresses only the issues of a neutron star spin-down.
Version to be published in Phys. Rev.
Neutrino Emission from Magnetized Proto-Neutron Stars in Relativistic Mean Field Theory
We make a perturbative calculation of neutrino scattering and absorption in
hot and dense hyperonic neutron-star matter in the presence of a strong
magnetic field. We find that the absorption cross-sections show a remarkable
angular dependence in that the neutrino absorption strength is reduced in a
direction parallel to the magnetic field and enhanced in the opposite
direction. This asymmetry in the neutrino absorbtion can be as much as 2.2 % of
the entire neutrino momentum for an interior magnetic field of \sim 2 x 10^{17}
G. We estimate the pulsar kick velocities associated with this asymmetry in a
fully relativistic mean-field theory formulation. We show that the kick
velocities calculated here are comparable to observed pulsar velocities.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1009.097
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