Shear modulus of solid neutron star crust is calculated by thermodynamic
perturbation theory taking into account ion motion. At given density the crust
is modelled as a body-centered cubic Coulomb crystal of fully ionized atomic
nuclei of one type with the uniform charge-compensating electron background.
Classic and quantum regimes of ion motion are considered. The calculations in
the classic temperature range agree well with previous Monte Carlo simulations.
At these temperatures the shear modulus is given by the sum of a positive
contribution due to the static lattice and a negative ∝T contribution
due to the ion motion. The quantum calculations are performed for the first
time. The main result is that at low temperatures the contribution to the shear
modulus due to the ion motion saturates at a constant value, associated with
zero-point ion vibrations. Such behavior is qualitatively similar to the
zero-point ion motion contribution to the crystal energy. The quantum effects
may be important for lighter elements at higher densities, where the ion plasma
temperature is not entirely negligible compared to the typical Coulomb ion
interaction energy. The results of numerical calculations are approximated by
convenient fitting formulae. They should be used for precise neutron star
oscillation modelling, a rapidly developing branch of stellar seismology.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, accepted to MNRA