2,004 research outputs found

    Anisotropic pressure in the quark core of a strongly magnetized hybrid star

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    The impact of a strong magnetic field, varying with the total baryon number density, on thermodynamic properties of strange quark matter (SQM) in the core of a magnetized hybrid star is considered at zero temperature within the framework of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) bag model. It is clarified that the central magnetic field strength is bound from above by the value at which the derivative of the longitudinal pressure with respect to the baryon number density vanishes first somewhere in the quark core under varying the central field. Above this upper bound, the instability along the magnetic field is developed in magnetized SQM. The total energy density, longitudinal and transverse pressures are found as functions of the total baryon number density.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Anisotropic pressure in dense neutron matter under the presence of a strong magnetic field

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    Dense neutron matter with recently developed BSk19 and BSk21 Skyrme effective forces is considered in magnetic fields up to 102010^{20} G at zero temperature. The breaking of the rotational symmetry by the magnetic field leads to the differentiation between the pressures along and perpendicular to the field direction which becomes significant in the fields H>Hth1018H>H_{th}\sim10^{18} G. The longitudinal pressure vanishes in the critical field 1018<Hc101910^{18}<H_c\lesssim10^{19} G, resulting in the longitudinal instability of neutron matter. For the Skyrme force fitted to the stiffer underlying equation of state (BSk21 vs. BSk19) the threshold HthH_{th} and critical HcH_c magnetic fields become larger. The longitudinal and transverse pressures as well as the anisotropic equation of state of neutron matter are determined under the conditions relevant for the cores of magnetars.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; published online 7 December 201

    Stability of magnetized strange quark matter in the MIT bag model with the density dependent bag pressure

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    The stability of magnetized strange quark matter (MSQM) is studied in the MIT bag model with the density dependent bag pressure. In the consistent thermodynamic description of MSQM, the quark chemical potentials, the total thermodynamic potential and the anisotropic pressure acquire the corresponding additional term proportional to the density derivative of the bag pressure. The model parameter space is determined, for which MSQM is absolutely stable, i.e., its energy per baryon is less than that of the most stable 56^{56}Fe nucleus under the zero external pressure and vanishing temperature. It is shown that there exists the magnetic field strength HumaxH_{u\,max} at which the upper bound BuB_\infty^u on the asymptotic bag pressure BB(ϱBϱ0B_\infty\equiv B(\varrho_B\gg \varrho_0) (ϱ0\varrho_0 being the nuclear saturation density) from the absolute stability window vanishes. The value of this field, \hbox{HumaxH_{u\,max}\sim(1(1--3)10183)\cdot10^{18}}~G, represents the upper bound on the magnetic field strength, which can be reached in a strongly magnetized strange quark star. It is clarified how the absolute stability window and upper bound on the magnetic field strength are affected by varying the parameters in the Gaussian parametrization for the density dependence of the bag pressure.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure

    De-Placement: Constructing and Mapping Place in Collaboration with Artists

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    Extension of the formal report using images to present a more visual exploration of project findings.Arts and Humanities Research Counci

    Finite temperature effects in antiferromagnetism of nuclear matter

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    The influence of the finite temperature on the antiferromagnetic (AFM) spin ordering in symmetric nuclear matter with the effective Gogny interaction is studied within the framework of a Fermi liquid formalism. It is shown that the AFM spin polarization parameter of partially polarized nuclear matter for low enough temperatures increases with temperature. The entropy of the AFM spin state for some temperature range is larger than the entropy of the normal state. Nerveless, the free energy of the AFM spin state is always less than the free energy of the normal state and, hence, the AFM spin polarized state is preferable for all temperatures below the critical temperature.Comment: To appear in PRC; some references and comments adde

    Finite temperature effects on spin polarization of neutron matter in a strong magnetic field

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    Spin polarization of neutron matter at finite temperatures and strong magnetic fields up to 101810^{18} G is studied in the model with the Skyrme effective interaction. It is shown that, together with the thermodynamically stable branch of solutions for the spin polarization parameter corresponding to the case when the majority of neutron spins are oriented opposite to the direction of the magnetic field (negative spin polarization), the self-consistent equations, beginning from some threshold density, have also two other branches of solutions corresponding to positive spin polarization. The influence of finite temperatures on spin polarization remains moderate in the Skyrme model up to temperatures relevant for protoneutron stars, and, in particular, the scenario with the metastable state characterized by positive spin polarization, considered at zero temperature in Phys. Rev. C {\bf 80}, 065801 (2009), is preserved at finite temperatures as well. It is shown that above certain density the entropy for various branches of spin polarization in neutron matter with the Skyrme interaction in a strong magnetic field demonstrates the unusual behavior being larger than that of the nonpolarized state. By providing the corresponding low-temperature analysis, it is clarified that this unexpected behavior should be addressed to the dependence of the entropy of a spin polarized state on the effective masses of neutrons with spin up and spin down, and to a certain constraint on them which is violated in the respective density range.Comment: Prepared with RevTeX4, 6pp., 4 figs; v2: accepted in JKA
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