25,272 research outputs found
The role of shear in dissipative gravitational collapse
In this paper we investigate the physics of a radiating star undergoing
dissipative collapse in the form of a radial heat flux. Our treatment clearly
demonstrates how the presence of shear affects the collapse process; we are in
a position to contrast the physical features of the collapsing sphere in the
presence of shear with the shear-free case. By employing a causal heat
transport equation of the Maxwell-Cattaneo form we show that the shear leads to
an enhancement of the core temperature thus emphasizing that relaxational
effects cannot be ignored when the star leaves hydrostatic equilibrium.Comment: 15 pages, To appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Spin Response and Neutrino Emissivity of Dense Neutron Matter
We study the spin response of cold dense neutron matter in the limit of zero
momentum transfer, and show that the frequency dependence of the
long-wavelength spin response is well constrained by sum-rules and the
asymptotic behavior of the two-particle response at high frequency. The
sum-rules are calculated using Auxiliary Field Diffusion Monte Carlo technique
and the high frequency two-particle response is calculated for several
nucleon-nucleon potentials. At nuclear saturation density, the sum-rules
suggest that the strength of the spin response peaks at 40--60
MeV, decays rapidly for 100 MeV, and has a sizable strength below
40 MeV. This strength at relatively low energy may lead to enhanced neutrino
production rates in dense neutron-rich matter at temperatures of relevance to
core-collapse supernova.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures. Minor change. Published versio
Phase Structure of 2-Flavor Quark Matter: Heterogeneous Superconductors
We analyze the free energy of charge and color neutral 2-flavor quark matter
within the BCS approximation. We consider both the homogeneous gapless
superconducting phase and the heterogeneous mixed phase where normal and BCS
superconducting phases coexist. We calculate the surface tension between normal
and superconducting phases and use it to compare the free energies of the
gapless and mixed phases. Our calculation, which retains only the leading order
gradient contribution to the free energy, indicates that the mixed phase is
energetically favored over an interesting range of densities of relevance to 2
flavor quark matter in neutron stars.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures. Major Revisions. Includes a detailed discussion
of the kinetic terms of the effective theory, instabilities of the gapless
phase and the charge neutral phase diagra
Dispersion and decay of collective modes in neutron star cores
We calculate the frequencies of collective modes of neutrons, protons and
electrons in the outer core of neutron stars. The neutrons and protons are
treated in a hydrodynamic approximation and the electrons are regarded as
collisionless. The coupling of the nucleons to the electrons leads to Landau
damping of the collective modes and to significant dispersion of the low-lying
modes. We investigate the sensitivity of the mode frequencies to the strength
of entrainment between neutrons and protons, which is not well characterized.
The contribution of collective modes to the thermal conductivity is evaluated.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Contact stress analysis of spiral bevel gears using nonlinear finite element static analysis
A procedure is presented for performing three-dimensional stress analysis of spiral bevel gears in mesh using the finite element method. The procedure involves generating a finite element model by solving equations that identify tooth surface coordinates. Coordinate transformations are used to orientate the gear and pinion for gear meshing. Contact boundary conditions are simulated with gap elements. A solution technique for correct orientation of the gap elements is given. Example models and results are presented
The Stability of Strange Star Crusts and Strangelets
We construct strangelets, taking into account electrostatic effects,
including Debye screening, and arbitrary surface tension sigma of the interface
between vacuum and quark matter. We find that there is a critical surface
tension sigma_crit below which large strangelets are unstable to fragmentation
and below which quark star surfaces will fragment into a crystalline crust made
of charged strangelets immersed in an electron gas. We derive a
model-independent relationship between sigma_crit and two parameters that
characterize any quark matter equation of state. For reasonable model equations
of state, we find sigma_crit typically of order a few MeV/fm^2. If sigma <=
sigma_crit, the size-distribution of strangelets in cosmic rays could feature a
peak corresponding to the stable strangelets that we construct.Comment: 11 pages, LaTe
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