387 research outputs found
On the minimum and maximum mass of neutron stars and the delayed collapse
The minimum and maximum mass of protoneutron stars and neutron stars are
investigated. The hot dense matter is described by relativistic (including
hyperons) and non-relativistic equations of state. We show that the minimum
mass ( 0.88 - 1.28 M_{\sun}) of a neutron star is determined by the
earliest stage of its evolution and is nearly unaffected by the presence of
hyperons. The maximum mass of a neutron star is limited by the protoneutron
star or hot neutron star stage. Further we find that the delayed collapse of a
neutron star into a black hole during deleptonization is not only possible for
equations of state with softening components, as for instance, hyperons, meson
condensates etc., but also for neutron stars with a pure nucleonic-leptonic
equation of state.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, using EDP Siences Latex A&A style, to be
published in A&
S-wave Pairing of Hyperons in Dense Matter
In this work we calculate the gap energies of hyperons in
neutron star matter. The calculation is based on a solution of the BCS gap
equation for an effective G-matrix parameterization of the
interaction with a nuclear matter background, presented recently by Lanskoy and
Yamamoto. We find that a gap energy of a few tenths of MeV is expected for
Fermi momenta up to about 1.3 fm. Implications for neutron
star matter are examined, and suggest the existence of a
superfluid between the threshold baryon density for formation and the
baryon density where the fraction reaches .Comment: 16 pages, Revtex, 9 figures, 33 reference
Pair condensation and bound states in fermionic systems
We study the finite temperature-density phase diagram of an attractive
fermionic system that supports two-body (dimer) and three-body (trimer) bound
states in free space. Using interactions characteristic for nuclear systems, we
obtain the critical temperature T_c2 for the superfluid phase transition and
the limiting temperature T_c3 for the extinction of trimers. The phase diagram
features a Cooper-pair condensate in the high-density, low-temperature domain
which, with decreasing density, crosses over to a Bose condensate of strongly
bound dimers. The high-temperature, low-density domain is populated by trimers
whose binding energy decreases toward the density-temperature domain occupied
by the superfluid and vanishes at a critical temperature T_c3 > T_c2.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, uses RevTex; v2: 12 pages, 4 figures, matches
published versio
Time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy of proton transfer in the ground state of chloromalonaldehyde: Wave-packet dynamics on effective potential surfaces of reduced dimensionality
We report on a simple but widely useful method for obtaining time-independent potential surfaces of reduced dimensionality wherein the coupling between reaction and substrate modes is embedded by averaging over an ensemble of classical trajectories. While these classically averaged potentials with their reduced dimensionality should be useful whenever a separation between reaction and substrate modes is meaningful, their use brings about significant simplification in studies of time-resolved photoelectron spectra in polyatomic systems where full-dimensional studies of skeletal and photoelectron dynamics can be prohibitive. Here we report on the use of these effective potentials in the studies of dump-probe photoelectron spectra of intramolecular proton transfer in chloromalonaldehyde. In these applications the effective potentials should provide a more realistic description of proton-substrate couplings than the sudden or adiabatic approximations commonly employed in studies of proton transfer. The resulting time-dependent photoelectron signals, obtained here assuming a constant value of the photoelectron matrix element for ionization of the wave packet, are seen to track the proton transfer. (c) 2006 American Institute of Physics.1241
Effect of hyperon bulk viscosity on neutron-star r-modes
Neutron stars are expected to contain a significant number of hyperons in
addition to protons and neutrons in the highest density portions of their
cores. Following the work of Jones, we calculate the coefficient of bulk
viscosity due to nonleptonic weak interactions involving hyperons in
neutron-star cores, including new relativistic and superfluid effects. We
evaluate the influence of this new bulk viscosity on the gravitational
radiation driven instability in the r-modes. We find that the instability is
completely suppressed in stars with cores cooler than a few times 10^9 K, but
that stars rotating more rapidly than 10-30% of maximum are unstable for
temperatures around 10^10 K. Since neutron-star cores are expected to cool to a
few times 10^9 K within seconds (much shorter than the r-mode instability
growth time) due to direct Urca processes, we conclude that the gravitational
radiation instability will be suppressed in young neutron stars before it can
significantly change the angular momentum of the star.Comment: final PRD version, minor typos etc correcte
Minimal Cooling of Neutron Stars: A New Paradigm
A new classification of neutron star cooling scenarios, involving either
``minimal'' cooling or ``enhanced'' cooling is proposed. The minimal cooling
scenario replaces and extends the so-called standard cooling scenario to
include neutrino emission from the Cooper pair breaking and formation process.
This emission dominates that due to the modified Urca process for temperatures
close to the critical temperature for superfluid pairing. Minimal cooling is
distinguished from enhanced cooling by the absence of neutrino emission from
any direct Urca process, due either to nucleons or to exotica. Within the
minimal cooling scenario, theoretical cooling models can be considered to be a
four parameter family involving the equation of state of dense matter,
superfluid properties of dense matter, the composition of the neutron star
envelope, and the mass of the neutron star. Consequences of minimal cooling are
explored through extensive variations of these parameters. Results are compared
with the inferred properties of thermally-emitting neutron stars in order to
ascertain if enhanced cooling occurs in any of them. All stars for which
thermal emissions have been clearly detected are at least marginally consistent
with the lack of enhanced cooling. The two pulsars PSR 0833-45 (Vela) and PSR
1706-44 would require enhanced cooling in case their ages and/or temperatures
are on the lower side of their estimated values whereas the four stars PSR
0656+14, PSR 1055-52, Geminga, and RX J0720.4-3125 may require some source of
internal heating in case their age and/or luminosity are on the upper side of
their estimated values. The new upper limits on the thermal luminosity of PSR
J0205+6449 and RX J0007.0+7302 are indicative of the occurrence of some
enhanced neutrino emission beyond the minimal scenario.Comment: Version to appear in ApJ Supplements. Minor modifications in text and
discussion of updated data with new figure
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