6,604 research outputs found
Conditions for Phase Equilibrium in Supernovae, Proto-Neutron and Neutron Stars
We investigate the qualitative properties of phase transitions in a general
way, if not the single particle numbers of the system but only some particular
charges like e.g. baryon number are conserved. In addition to globally
conserved charges we analyze the implications of locally conserved charge
fractions, like e.g. local electric charge neutrality or locally fixed proton
or lepton fractions. The conditions for phase equilibrium are derived and it is
shown, that the properties of the phase transition do not depend on the locally
conserved fractions. Finally, the general formalism is applied to the
liquid-gas phase transition and the hadron-quark phase transition for typical
astrophysical environments like in supernovae, proto-neutron or a neutron
stars. We demonstrate that the Maxwell construction known from
cold-deleptonized neutron star matter with two locally charge neutral phases
requires modifications and further assumptions concerning the applicability for
hot lepton-rich matter. All possible combinations of local and global
conservation laws are analyzed, and the physical meaningful cases are
identified. Several new kinds of mixed phases are presented, as e.g. a locally
charge neutral mixed phase in proto-neutron stars which will disappear during
the cooling and deleptonization of the proto-neutron star.Comment: 18 page
One-sided Heegaard splittings of RP^3
Using basic properties of one-sided Heegaard splittings, a direct proof that
geometrically compressible one-sided splittings of RP^3 are stabilised is
given. The argument is modelled on that used by Waldhausen to show that
two-sided splittings of S^3 are standard.Comment: This is the version published by Algebraic & Geometric Topology on 20
September 200
Mass, radius, and composition of the outer crust of nonaccreting cold neutron stars
The properties and composition of the outer crust of nonaccreting cold
neutron stars are studied by applying the model of Baym, Pethick, and
Sutherland, which was extended by including higher order corrections of the
atomic binding, screening, exchange and zero-point energy. The most recent
experimental nuclear data from the atomic mass table of Audi, Wapstra, and
Thibault from 2003 is used. Extrapolation to the drip line is utilized by
various state-of-the-art theoretical nuclear models (finite range droplet,
relativistic nuclear field and non-relativistic Skyrme Hartree-Fock
parameterizations). The different nuclear models are compared with respect to
the mass and radius of the outer crust for different neutron star
configurations and the nuclear compositions of the outer crust.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, submitted to J. Phys. G, part of the proceedings
of the Nuclear Physics in Astrophysics III conference in Dresde
Abelian covers of surfaces and the homology of the level L mapping class group
We calculate the first homology group of the mapping class group with
coefficients in the first rational homology group of the universal abelian -cover of the surface. If the surface has one marked point, then the
answer is \Q^{\tau(L)}, where is the number of positive divisors of
. If the surface instead has one boundary component, then the answer is
\Q. We also perform the same calculation for the level subgroup of the
mapping class group. Set . If the surface has one
marked point, then the answer is \Q[H_L], the rational group ring of .
If the surface instead has one boundary component, then the answer is \Q.Comment: 32 pages, 10 figures; numerous corrections and simplifications; to
appear in J. Topol. Ana
A new possible quark-hadron mixed phase in protoneutron stars
The phase transition from hadronic matter to quark matter at high density
might be a strong first order phase transition in presence of a large surface
tension between the two phases. While this implies a constant-pressure mixed
phase for cold and catalyzed matter this is not the case for the hot and lepton
rich matter formed in a protoneutron star. We show that it is possible to
obtain a mixed phase with non-constant pressure by considering the global
conservation of lepton number during the stage of neutrino trapping. In turn,
it allows for the appearance of a new kind of mixed phase as long as neutrinos
are trapped and its gradual disappearance during deleptonization. This new
mixed phase, being composed by two electric neutral phases, does not develop a
Coulomb lattice and it is formed only by spherical structures, drops and
bubbles, which can have macroscopic sizes. The disappearance of the mixed phase
at the end of deleptonization might lead to a delayed collapse of the star into
a more compact configuration containing a core of pure quark phase. In this
scenario, a significant emission of neutrinos and, possibly, gravitational
waves are expected.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Dynamical Systems On Three Manifolds Part II: 3-Manifolds,Heegaard Splittings and Three-Dimensional Systems
The global behaviour of nonlinear systems is extremely important in control
and systems theory since the usual local theories will only give information
about a system in some neighbourhood of an operating point. Away from that
point, the system may have totally different behaviour and so the theory
developed for the local system will be useless for the global one.
In this paper we shall consider the analytical and topological structure of
systems on 2- and 3- manifolds and show that it is possible to obtain systems
with 'arbitrarily strange' behaviour, i.e., arbitrary numbers of chaotic
regimes which are knotted and linked in arbitrary ways. We shall do this by
considering Heegaard Splittings of these manifolds and the resulting systems
defined on the boundaries.Comment: 15 pages with 9 pictures. Accepted by Int. J. of Bifurcation and
Chao
Finite-size effects in dynamics of zero-range processes
The finite-size effects prominent in zero-range processes exhibiting a
condensation transition are studied by using continuous-time Monte Carlo
simulations. We observe that, well above the thermodynamic critical point, both
static and dynamic properties display fluid-like behavior up to a density
{\rho}c (L), which is the finite-size counterpart of the critical density
{\rho}c = {\rho}c (L \rightarrow \infty). We determine this density from the
cross-over behavior of the average size of the largest cluster. We then show
that several dynamical characteristics undergo a qualitative change at this
density. In particular, the size distribution of the largest cluster at the
moment of relocation, the persistence properties of the largest cluster and
correlations in its motion are studied.Comment: http://pre.aps.org/abstract/PRE/v82/i3/e03111
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