NÄIVE DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS IN AN EFFECTIVE FIELD THEORY FOR NEUTRON STARS

2004 ◽  
Vol 13 (07) ◽  
pp. 1223-1228
Author(s):  
CLÁUDIO M. MAEKAWA ◽  
MOISÉS RAZEIRA ◽  
EDUARDO F. LÜTZ ◽  
CÉSAR A. Z. VASCONCELLOS ◽  
MANFRED DILLIG

In the investigation of the role of naturalness in effective theory, we focus on dense hadronic matter in a generalized relativistic multi-baryon Lagrangian density mean field approach which contains nonlinear self-couplings of the σ and δ meson fields interacting with the fundamental baryon octet and with the ω and ϱ meson fields and compare its predictions with estimates obtained within a phenomenological naive dimensional analysis based on the naturalness of the coupling constants of the Lagrangian model; our investigation is limited however to the scalar sector of the theory. Upon adjusting the model parameters to describe bulk static properties of ordinary nuclear matter, we show that our approach represents a natural modelling of nuclear matter under the extreme conditions of density as found in the interior of neutron stars.

2004 ◽  
Vol 13 (07) ◽  
pp. 1413-1418 ◽  
Author(s):  
MOISÉS RAZEIRA ◽  
CÉSAR A. Z. VASCONCELLOS

High density hadronic matter is studied in a generalized relativistic multi-baryon Lagrangian density mean field approach which contains nonlinear couplings of the σ, ω, ϱ fields. We compare the predictions of our model with estimates obtained within a phenomenological naive dimensional analysis based on the naturalness of the coefficients of the theory. Upon adjusting the model parameters to describe bulk static properties of ordinary nuclear matter, we show that our approach represents a natural modelling of nuclear matter under the extreme conditions of density as the ones found in the interior of neutron stars. Moreover, we show that naturalness play a major role in effective field theory and, in combination with experiment, could represent a relevant criterium to select a model among others in the description of global static properties of neutron stars.


2003 ◽  
Vol 18 (32) ◽  
pp. 2255-2264 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. A. Battistel ◽  
G. Krein

Chiral symmetry breaking at finite baryon density is usually discussed in the context of quark matter, i.e. a system of deconfined quarks. Many systems like stable nuclei and neutron stars however have quarks confined within nucleons. In this paper we construct a Fermi sea of three-quark nucleon clusters and investigate the change of the quark condensate as a function of baryon density. We study the effect of quark clustering on the in-medium quark condensate and compare results with the traditional approach of modeling hadronic matter in terms of a Fermi sea of deconfined quarks.


Author(s):  
C. Drischler ◽  
J.W. Holt ◽  
C. Wellenhofer

Born in the aftermath of core-collapse supernovae, neutron stars contain matter under extraordinary conditions of density and temperature that are difficult to reproduce in the laboratory. In recent years, neutron star observations have begun to yield novel insights into the nature of strongly interacting matter in the high-density regime where current theoretical models are challenged. At the same time, chiral effective field theory has developed into a powerful framework to study nuclear matter properties with quantified uncertainties in the moderate-density regime for modeling neutron stars. In this article, we review recent developments in chiral effective field theory and focus on many-body perturbation theory as a computationally efficient tool for calculating the properties of hot and dense nuclear matter. We also demonstrate how effective field theory enables statistically meaningful comparisons among nuclear theory predictions, nuclear experiments, and observational constraints on the nuclear equation of state. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Nuclear and Particle Science, Volume 71 is September 2021. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Germán Malfatti

This thesis work focuses on studying the possible existence of phase transitions in the immediate compact remnants of core collapse supernova, neutron stars, and the theoretical models that describe the interior of dense matter. Specifically, we are interested in analyzing the feasibility of a transition from hadronic matter to quark matter in the cores of these objects. The density of matter inside neutron stars is several times that of atomic nuclei, and the equation of state that describes such matter in such a regime is still unknown. In this context, it is known that the interaction between the constituents of nucleons, the quarks, weakens with increasing density due to the intrinsic property of the QCD known as it asymptotic freedom. Therefore, matter should either dissolve into a quark-free state at high densities, or else form a superconduct- ing state of color. This superconducting phase of color would be energetically favorable, if it were present in a cold neutron star, since a system of fermions that interact weakly at low temperature is unstable with respect to the formation of Cooper pairs. Although it is impossible to know both theoretically and experimentally whether these phases exist in neutron stars, the interpolation of the resolvable part of QCD at high densities, together with the hadronic equations of state at low densities, suggest that they could appear in the interior of compact objects. For the phase transition we will use two different formalisms: the Maxwell formalism, in which an abrupt phase transition between hadronic and quark matter without mixed phase formation is assumed, and the Gibbs formalism, in which a mixed phase in which hadrons and quarks coexist. For the description of hadronic matter, we will use different parametrizations of the relativistic mean field model with density-dependent coupling constants. For the description of quark matter we will use an effective nonlocal Nambu Jona-Lasinio model of three flavors with vector interactions, in which we will include the possibility of formation of diquarks to model a superconducting phase of color in SU (3), which we will call 2SC + s. Phase diagrams and equations of state of quark matter at finite temperature are presented, and the influence of that kind of matter on observables associated with neutron stars is investigated. Likewise, using hybrid equations of state, the simplified thermal evolution of compact stars during their formation is studied, from their state of proto-neutron stars to that of cold neutron stars, and the results obtained are compared with recent astrophysical observations. The pa- rameterizations used in this work are adjusted to the most recent measurements of masses and coupling constants of the QCD, which imposes strong restrictions on the existence of quark matter in proto-stars, unlike what happens with less realistic models or with more free parameters. However, the results obtained indicate that even considering these restrictions, the occurrence of quark matter in the nuclei of these stars remains a promis- ing possibility. The remaining free parameters of the models were adjusted taking into account the observational restrictions, coming from precise determinations of the pulsars masses of ∼ 2 M⊙, and the event corresponding to the fusion of two neutron stars, known as GW170817. The fact that the use of more realistic models for the description of the dense matter in these objects indicates the presence of quark matter inside neutron stars, could be an answer to the question of the behavior of that kind of matter and the determination of its corresponding equation of state.


2004 ◽  
Vol 13 (07) ◽  
pp. 1177-1181
Author(s):  
ALEXANDRE MESQUITA ◽  
MOISÉS RAZEIRA ◽  
CÉSAR A. Z. VASCONCELLOS ◽  
MANFRED DILLIG ◽  
BARDO E. J. BODMANN

We study effects of temperature in hadron dense matter within a generalized relativistic mean field approach based on the naturalness of the various coupling constants of the theory, The Lagrangian density of our formulation contains the fundamental baryon octet, nonlinear self-couplings of the σ and δ meson fields coupled to the baryons and to the ω and ρ meson fields. By adjusting the model parameters, after inclusion in a consistent way of chemical equilibrium, baryon number and electric charge conservation, our model describes static bulk properties of ordinary nuclear matter and neutron stars. In the framework of the Sommerfeld approximation, we extend our approach to the T≠0 domain. The Sommerfeld approximation allows a drastic simplification of computational work while improving the capability of the theoretical analysis of the role of temperature on static properties of protoneutron stars. We perform the calculations by using our nonlinear model, which we extend by considering trapped neutrinos introduced into the formalism by fixing the lepton fraction. Integrating the Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff equations we have obtained standard plots for the mass and radius of protoneutron stars as a function of the central density and temperature. Our predictions include the determination of an absolute value for the protoneutron star limiting mass at low and intermediate temperature regimes.


2009 ◽  
Vol 2009 ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Schun T. Uechi ◽  
Hiroshi Uechi

The conservingσ-ω-ρmean-field approximation with nonlinear interactions of hadrons has been applied to examine properties of nuclear matter and hyperonic neutron stars. The nonlinear interactions that will produce density-dependent effective masses and coupling constants of hadrons are included in order to examine density correlations among properties of nuclear matter and neutron stars such as binding energy, incompressibility,K, symmetry energy,a4, hyperon-onset density, and maximum masses of neutron stars. The conditions of conserving approximations in order to maintain thermodynamic consistency to an approximation are essential for the analysis of density-dependent correlations.


2022 ◽  
Vol 258 ◽  
pp. 07004
Author(s):  
Niko Jokela

The holographic models for dense QCD matter work surprisingly well. A general implication seems that the deconfinement phase transition dictates the maximum mass of neutron stars. The nuclear matter phase turns out to be rather stiff which, if continuously merged with nuclear matter models based on effective field theories, leads to the conclusion that neutron stars do not have quark matter cores in the light of all current astrophysical data. We comment that as the perturbative QCD results are in stark contrast with strong coupling results, any future simulations of neutron star mergers incorporating corrections beyond ideal fluid should proceed cautiously. For this purpose, we provide a model which treats nuclear and quark matter phases in a unified framework at strong coupling.


2010 ◽  
Vol 19 (10) ◽  
pp. 1935-1946
Author(s):  
GUILHERME F. MARRANGHELLO ◽  
CESAR A. Z. VASCONCELLOS

The relativistic parametric coupling model is used here to describe global static properties of nuclear matter and neutron stars. Using recent observational data related to neutron star properties and experimental results of heavy-ion collisions, we review some properties of the effective model and we impose this way new constraints on its coupling constants. Then we analyze the consequences on already known parameters of nuclear matter, i.e., the compression modulus, the effective nucleon mass, and the maximum neutron star mass predicted by integrating the Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff equations. To achieve this goal, we have explored the parametric coupling model in a wide range of parameters. We made use of recent data on flow analysis to constraint this parameter. Our results indicate values for the compression modulus of nuclear matter and for the maximum mass of neutron stars which are in good agreement with the observational data.


2004 ◽  
Vol 13 (07) ◽  
pp. 1485-1491 ◽  
Author(s):  
SÉRGIO S. ROCHA ◽  
MOISÉS RAZEIRA ◽  
CÉSAR A. Z. VASCONCELLOS ◽  
MANFRED DILLIG

We study dense hadronic matter in a generalized relativistic mean field approach which contains nonlinear couplings of the σ, ω, ϱ, δ fields and compare its predictions for properties of neutron stars with the corresponding results from different models found in the literature. Our predictions indicate a substantial modification in static global properties of nuclear matter and neutron stars with the inclusion of the δ meson into the formalism.


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