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The neutron radius of 208 Pb and neutron star structure. http:// www.astro.cornell.edu/ ~shami/guitar/ guitar

The neutron radius of 208 Pb and neutron star structure

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The neutron radius of 208 Pb and neutron star structure. http://www.astro.cornell.edu/~shami/guitar/ guitar nebula, neutron star bow wave. Outline. The big picture Neutrons in nuclei Neutron stars and nuclear matter Conclusion. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

The neutron radius of 208Pb and neutron star structure.

http://www.astro.cornell.edu/~shami/guitar/ guitar nebula, neutron star bow wave

Page 2: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Outline

• The big picture

• Neutrons in nuclei

• Neutron stars and nuclear matter

• Conclusion

Page 3: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Phase diagram of waterThe state of matter depends on pressure, temperature, and density.

Page 4: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

New phases of matter

• We see in the case of water that new phases of matter appear at pressures far from our normal experience, for example, Ice XI at 1 million atmospheres.

• What would happen to matter if we could continue to crush it under high pressure?

• What is the phase diagram of matter under extreme conditions?

Page 5: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

World map in 1532 Typus Cosmographicus Universalis, S. Grynaeus/H. Hoblein/S.

Münster,

Page 6: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Danger in new territories!What we don’t know for a fact we can compensate for by imagination.

Page 7: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Physical properties of systems containing nuclear matter

Object Mass(g) R(km) rS (km) Density( g/cm3)

neutron star

4 x 1033 10 6 5 x 1014

white dwarf

2 x 1033 5400 3 3 x 106

Sun 2 x 1033 7 x 105 3 1.4 avg,

160 in core

Jupiter 2 x 1030 7 x 104 3 x 10-3 1.3

Earth 6 x 1027 6 x 103 9 x 10-6 5.5

Lead nucleus

3.5 x 10-22 6 x 10-18 2.6 x 10-55 3 x 1014

Page 8: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Phase diagram of nuclear matter

Page 9: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Nuclei and Neutron Stars

• Nuclei are the central cores of atoms. Almost all the visible mass in the universe is in protons and nuclei.

• Neutron stars are the collapsed iron cores of massive stars ( stars with masses greater than 8 solar masses). These stars no longer generate energy internally by nuclear fusion, although they can be the sites of huge bursts of energy.

Page 10: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Equation of state (eos) connects nuclear physics and neutron stars

Page 11: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Interactions affect the EOS

Page 12: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Measuring matter in small boxes

• We measure the angle of scatter, of high energy electrons ( E > 1 GeV) from nuclei.

• R~ 5.5 x 10-13 cm, R ~ 0.2 F/ PF = 10-13 cm

• P = photon momentum in GeV

Page 13: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Electron Scattering gives very precise information on charge

distributions in the nucleus

Page 14: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

The neutron distribution is not so well known as the proton .

• Photons couple poorly to neutral neutrons compared to the charged protons.

• However, electrons interact with nucleons via the weak interaction too.

• The Z0 boson of the weak interaction

interacts several times more strongly with neutrons than with protons.

• Weak interaction scattering is a tough experimental challenge.

Page 15: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Rn – Rp for two different theories of the nuclear mean field

Page 16: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Look for helicity asymmetry in electron scattering

Page 17: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Helicity dependent Scattering Asymmetry for Polarized

Electrons

Page 18: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Aerial View of JLab Accelerator

Page 19: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Hall A Spectrometers

Page 20: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

High Power Cryogenic Lead Target Built and tested at CSLA

Page 21: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

High rate integrating detector

Page 22: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

What keeps a star stable?

Page 23: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Formation of Neutron stars

Page 24: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Quantum Ideal Gas

Page 25: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Final state of a massive neutron star

Page 26: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

A 12 km radius neutron star in Los Angeles

Page 27: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Complementary Laboratories

Page 28: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Nuclear parameter dependence of N-star radius calculations

Page 29: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Neutron Star Structure

Page 30: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Some statistics of n-stars

• More than 1100 n-stars have been detected, primarily as pulsars

• The masses tend to center about 1.4 solar masses and the limits expected are 0.2<M<3. solar masses but the creation mechanism may fix the mass at ~ 1.4 Msun

• Radius determinations are difficult and controversial; in the 7 to 15 km range

• Reliable measurements of M and R would place severe restraints on the EOS

• Pulsars have high velocities, avg 450 km/s indicating an asymmetrical core collapse

Page 31: The neutron radius of  208 Pb and neutron star structure

Are there areas of the phase diagram that have never been populated in

the history of the Universe?