TY - JOUR
T1 - A Hot Water Bottle for Aging Neutron Stars
AU - Alford, Mark
AU - Jotwani, Pooja
AU - Kouvaris, Christoforos
AU - Kundu, Joydip
AU - Rajagopal, Krishna
PY - 2004
Y1 - 2004
N2 - The gapless color-flavor locked (gCFL) phase is the second-densest phase of
matter in the QCD phase diagram, making it a plausible constituent of the core
of neutron stars. We show that even a relatively small region of gCFL matter in
a star will dominate both the heat capacity C_V and the heat loss by neutrino
emission L_\nu. The gCFL phase is characterized by an unusual quasiparticle
dispersion relation that makes both its specific heat c_V and its neutrino
emissivity epsilon_\nu parametrically larger than in any other phase of nuclear
or quark matter. During the epoch in which the cooling of the star is dominated
by direct Urca neutrino emission, the presence of a gCFL region does not
strongly alter the cooling history because the enhancements of C_V and L_\nu
cancel against each other. At late times, however, the cooling is dominated by
photon emission from the surface, so L_\nu is irrelevant, and the anomalously
large heat capacity of the gCFL region keeps the star warm. The temperature
drops with time as T\sim t^{-1.4} rather than the canonical T\sim t^{-5}. This
provides a unique and potentially observable signature of gCFL quark matter.
AB - The gapless color-flavor locked (gCFL) phase is the second-densest phase of
matter in the QCD phase diagram, making it a plausible constituent of the core
of neutron stars. We show that even a relatively small region of gCFL matter in
a star will dominate both the heat capacity C_V and the heat loss by neutrino
emission L_\nu. The gCFL phase is characterized by an unusual quasiparticle
dispersion relation that makes both its specific heat c_V and its neutrino
emissivity epsilon_\nu parametrically larger than in any other phase of nuclear
or quark matter. During the epoch in which the cooling of the star is dominated
by direct Urca neutrino emission, the presence of a gCFL region does not
strongly alter the cooling history because the enhancements of C_V and L_\nu
cancel against each other. At late times, however, the cooling is dominated by
photon emission from the surface, so L_\nu is irrelevant, and the anomalously
large heat capacity of the gCFL region keeps the star warm. The temperature
drops with time as T\sim t^{-1.4} rather than the canonical T\sim t^{-5}. This
provides a unique and potentially observable signature of gCFL quark matter.
KW - astro-ph
KW - hep-ph
KW - nucl-th
U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevD.71.114011
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevD.71.114011
M3 - Journal article
SP - 114011
JO - Phys.Rev. D
JF - Phys.Rev. D
ER -