English

Stellar Superfluids

High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena 2014-03-24 v2 Superconductivity High Energy Physics - Phenomenology Nuclear Theory

Abstract

Neutron stars provide a fertile environment for exploring superfluidity under extreme conditions. It is not surprising that Cooper pairing occurs in dense matter since nucleon pairing is observed in nuclei as energy differences between even-even and odd-even nuclei. Since superfluids and superconductors in neutron stars profoundly affect neutrino emissivities and specific heats, their presence can be observed in the thermal evolution of neutron stars. An ever-growing number of cooling neutron stars, now amounting to 13 thermal sources, and several additional objects from which upper limits to temperatures can be ascertained, can now be used to discriminate among theoretical scenarios and even to dramatically restrict properties of nucleon pairing at high densities. In addition, observations of pulsars, including their spin-downs and glitch histories, additionally support the conjecture that superfluidity and superconductivity are ubiquitous within, and important to our understanding of, neutron stars.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1302.6626,
  title  = {Stellar Superfluids},
  author = {Dany Page and James M. Lattimer and Madappa Prakash and Andrew W. Steiner},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1302.6626},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

88 pages, 35 figures. Some new references added. To be published in the book "Novel Superfluids", Eds. K. H. Bennemann and J. B. Ketterson (Oxford University Press)

R2 v1 2026-06-21T23:33:13.395Z