For sufficiently strong magnetic fields and/or low temperatures, the neutron
star surface may be in a condensed state with little gas or plasma above it.
Such surface condensation can significantly affect the thermal emission from
isolated neutron stars, and may lead to the formation of a charge-depleted
acceleration zone ("vacuum gap") in the magnetosphere above the stellar polar
cap. Using the latest results on the cohesive property of magnetic condensed
matter, we quantitatively determine the conditions for surface condensation and
vacuum gap formation in magnetic neutron stars. We find that condensation can
occur if the thermal energy kT of the neutron star surface is less than about
8% of its cohesive energy Q_s, and that a vacuum gap can form if the neutron
star's rotation axis and magnetic moment point in opposite directions and kT is
less than about 4% of Q_s. Thus, vacuum gap accelerators may exist for some
neutron stars. Motivated by this result, we also study the physics of pair
cascades in the vacuum gap model for photon emission by accelerating electrons
and positrons due to both curvature radiation and resonant/nonresonant inverse
Compton scattering. Our calculations of the condition of cascade-induced vacuum
breakdown and the related pulsar death line/boundary generalize previous works
to the superstrong field regime. We find that inverse Compton scatterings do
not produce a sufficient number of high energy photons in the gap and thus do
not lead to pair cascades for most neutron star parameters. We discuss the
implications of our results for the recent observations of neutron star thermal
radiation as well as for the detection/non-detection of radio emission from
high-B pulsars and magnetars.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures. Minor changes. MNRAS in pres