COOLING N EUTRON ST A R S: THEORY AND OBSERVATIONS

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COOLING N COOLING N EUTRON ST EUTRON ST A A R R S: THEORY AND S: THEORY AND OBSERVATIONS OBSERVATIONS D.G. Yakovlev Ioffe Physical Technical Institute, St.-Petersburg, Russia Hirschegg – January 2009 Introduction Neutrino emission Cooling theory Phenomenological concept Theory and observation Connections Conclusions Main collaborators: A.D. Kaminker, Ioffe Institute A.Y. Potekhin, Ioffe Institute

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COOLING N EUTRON ST A R S: THEORY AND OBSERVATIONS. D.G. Yakovlev. Ioffe Physical Technical Institute, St.-Petersburg, Russia. Introduction Neutrino emission Cooling theory Phenomenological concept Theory and observation Connections Conclusions. Main collaborators: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of COOLING N EUTRON ST A R S: THEORY AND OBSERVATIONS

Page 1: COOLING N EUTRON ST A R S: THEORY AND OBSERVATIONS

COOLING NCOOLING NEUTRON STEUTRON STAARRS: THEORY AND S: THEORY AND OBSERVATIONS OBSERVATIONS

D.G. Yakovlev

Ioffe Physical Technical Institute, St.-Petersburg, Russia

Hirschegg – January – 2009

• Introduction• Neutrino emission• Cooling theory• Phenomenological concept• Theory and observation• Connections• Conclusions

Main collaborators:• A.D. Kaminker, Ioffe Institute• A.Y. Potekhin, Ioffe Institute

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Cooling Theory: Primitive and complicated at once

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Basic Ideas

48 29

Heat content:

~ 10TU T ergs

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PRE-PULSAR HISTORY

Stabler (1960) – PhD, First estimates of X-ray surface thermal emission

Chiu (1964) – Estimates that neutron stars can be discovered from observations of thermal X-rays

Morton (1964) , Chiu & Salpeter (1964), Bahcall & Wolf (1965) – First simplified cooling calculations

Tsuruta & Cameron (1966) – Basic formulation of all elements of the cooling theory

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Direct Urca, N/H

Neutrino Emission Processes in Neutron Star CoresOuter core Inner coreSlow emission Fast emission

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e en p e p e n

Pion condensate

Kaon condensation

Or quark matter

e eN N e N e N

e eB B e B e B

e ed u e u e d

Modified Urca nN pNe pNe nN

NN bremsstrahlung N N N N

Enhanced emission in inner cores of massive neutron stars:

Everywhere in neutron star cores:

6 6FAST 0F 9 FAST 0F 9 Q Q T L L T

8 8SLOW 0S 9 FAST 0S 9 Q Q T L L T

STANDARD

Fast

erg

cm

-3 s

-1

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Stage Duration Physics

Relaxation 10—100 yr Crust

Neutrino 10-100 kyr Core, surface

Photon infinite Surface, core,

reheating

THREE COOLING STAGES

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INITIAL THERMAL RELAXATION: LOOK FROM INSIDE AND OUTSIDE

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OBSERVATIONS AND BASIC COOLING CURVENonsuperfluid starNucleon core EOS PAL (1988)Modified Urca neutrino emission:slow cooling

1=Crab2=PSR J0205+64493=PSR J1119-61274=RX J0822-435=1E 1207-526=PSR J1357-64297=RX J0007.0+73038=Vela9=PSR B1706-4410=PSR J0538+281711=PSR B2234+6112=PSR 0656+1413=Geminga14=RX J1856.4-375415=PSR 1055-5216=PSR J2043+274017=PSR J0720.4-3125

Talks by Frank Haberl and Slava Zavlin

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MODIFIED AND DIRECT URCA PROCESSES

1=Crab2=PSR J0205+64493=PSR J1119-61274=RX J0822-435=1E 1207-526=PSR J1357-64297=RX J0007.0+73038=Vela9=PSR B1706-4410=PSR J0538+281711=PSR B2234+6112=PSR 0656+1413=Geminga14=RX J1856.4-375415=PSR 1055-5216=PSR J2043+274017=PSR J0720.4-3125

15MAX c

14D c

1.977 2.578 10 g/cc

1.358 8.17 10 g/cc

From 1.1 to 1.98 with step 0.01

M M

M M

M M M M

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BASIC PHENOMENOLOGICAL CONCEPT

SLOW FAST 1 2 SLOW FAST 1 2

BASIC PARAMETERS:

, , , , , , Q Q L L M M

Neutrino emissivity function Neutrino luminosity function

Problems:• To discriminate between neutrino mechanisms• To broaden transition from slow to fast neutrino emission

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MODIFIED AND DIRECT URCA PROCESSES: SMOOTH TRANSITION

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MODIFIED AND DIRECT URCA PROCESSES: SMOOTH TRANSITION

VELA 1.61 ?M M

1=Crab2=PSR J0205+64493=PSR J1119-61274=RX J0822-435=1E 1207-526=PSR J1357-64297=RX J0007.0+73038=Vela

9=PSR B1706-4410=PSR J0538+281711=PSR B2234+6112=PSR 0656+1413=Geminga14=RX J1856.4-375415=PSR 1055-5216=PSR J2043+274017=PSR J0720.4-3125

2p proton SF

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MODIFIED AND DIRECT URCA PROCESSES: SMOOTH TRANSITION -- II

VELA 1.47 ?M M

Mass ordering is the same!

2p proton SF

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Neutron stars with strongproton and mild neutron superfluidities in the cores

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TESTING THE LEVELS OF SLOW AND FAST NEUTRINO EMISSION

Slow neutrino emission:

Fast neutrino emission:

(Mod Urca) / 30Q

(Mod Urca) 30Q

Two other parameters are totally not constrained

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Broadening of threshold for fast neutrino emission

Superfluidity:

Suppresses ordinary neutrino processesInitiates Cooper-pairing neutrino emissionShould be: Strong in outer core to suppress modified Urca Penetrate into inner core to broaden direct Urca thresholdCan be: proton or neutron

E.,g. pion polarizationVoskresensky &Senatorov (1984, 1986)Schaab et al. (1997)

Magnetic broadening Baiko & Yakovlev (1999)

Nuclear physics effects

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Effects of accreted envelopes and surface magnetic fields

Different mass / of

accreted material on the surface

M M Dipole magnetic field

in heat blanketing layer

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Summary of cooling regulators

Regulators of neutrino emission in neutron star cores

EOS, composition of matterSuperfluidity

Heat content and conduction in cores

Heat capacityThermal conductivity

Thermal conduction in heat blanketing envelopes

Thermal conductivityChemical compositionMagnetic field

Internal heat sources (for old stars and magnetars)

Viscous dissipation of rotational energyOhmic decay of magnetic fields, ect.

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Direct Urca Pion condensate Kaon condensate

1 Aql X-12 4U 1608-5223 RX J1709-26394 KS 1731-2605 Cen X-46 SAX J1810.8-26097 XTE J2123-0588 1H 1905+0009 SAX 1808.4-3658

Data collected byKseniya Levenfish

CONNECTION: X-ray transients

Talk by Rudy Wijnands

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CONNECTION: Magnetars

Kaminker et al. (2006)

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SUMMARY OF CONNECTIONS

Objects Physics which is tested

Middle-aged isolated NSa Neutrino luminosity function

Composition and B-field in heat-blanketing envelopes

Young isolated NSs Crust

Quasistationary XRTs Neutrino luminosity function

Composition and B-field in heat-blanketing envelopes

Deep crustal heating

Quasipersistent XRTsKS 1731—260; MXB 1659—29

Crust

Deep crustal heating

Superbursts Crust

Magnetars after outbursts Crust

Magnetars in quasistationary

states

??

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CONCLUSIONS

Future

Today

• New observations and good practical theories of dense matter• Individual sources and statistical analysis

Cooling neutron stars Soft X-ray transients

• Constraints on slow and fast neutrino emission levels• Mass ordering

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CONCLUSIONSOrdinary cooling isolates neutron stars of age 1 kyr—1 Myr

• There is one basic phenomenological cooling concept (but many physical realizations)• Main cooling regulator: neutrino luminosity function • Warmest observed stars are low-massive; their neutrino luminosity seems to be <= 1/30 of modified Urca• Coldest observed stars are more massive; their neutrino luminosity should be > 30 of modified Urca (any enhanced neutrino emission would do)• Neutron star masses at which neutrino cooling is enhanced are not constrained• The real physical model of neutron star interior is not selected

Connections

• Directly related to neutron stars in soft X-ray transients (assuming deep crustal heating). From transient data the neutrino luminosity of massive stars is enhanced by direct Urca or pion condensation • Related to magnetars and superbusrts

Future

• New observations and accurate theories of dense matter• Individual sources and statistical analysis

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CONCLUSIONS

The case is not solved

Plenty of work ahead

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Enhanced emission in inner cores of massive neutron stars

Everywhere in neutron star cores

Neutrino Emission Processes in Neutron Star Cores

6 6FAST 0F 9 FAST 0F 9 Q Q T L L T

Model Process

N/H direct Urca

Pion condensate

Kaon condensate

Quark matter

3 10 [erg cm s ]Q

e eN N e N e N

e eB B e B e B

e ed u e u e d

e eB B e B e B 26 2710 3 10 23 2610 1023 2410 1023 2410 10

8 8SLOW 0S 9 FAST 0S 9 Q Q T L L T

Modified Urca

Bremsstrahlung

nN pNe pNe nN

N N N N

20 2110 3 10

19 2010 10

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HEAT( ) ( ) ( )sdT

C T L T L T Ldt

2 44 (1 / )

Heat blanketing envelope: ( )

( ) ( , ) exp( ( ))

s g

s s

L R T L L r R

T T T

T t T r t r

Analytical estimates

Thermal balance of cooling star with isothermal interior

Slow cooling viaModified Urca process

SLOW 69

1 year~tT

8 5~ 1.5 10 K in 10 yrsT t

Fast cooling viaDirect Urca process

FAST 49

1 min~tT

7~ 10 K in 200 yrsT t

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MAIN PHYSICAL MODELS

Problems:• To discriminate between neutrino mechanisms• To broaden transition from slow to fast neutrino emission

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e

ep

n

, e e e en p e p e n n n

dfffwQ epnfi )1)(1(2

npeepn

A Tc

mmmgGQ

6

31022 )31(

10080457

27 6 3 19

46 6 19

~ 3 10

~ 10

Q T erg cm s

L T erg s

FeFpFn ppp 02 ~

n

Direct Urca ProcessLattimer, Pethick, Prakash, Haensel (1991)

Threshold:In inner cores of massive stars

Similar processes with muons

Similar processes with hyperons, e.g.

Is forbidden in outer core by momentum conservation:

0 9 330 MeV/c, 120 MeV/c, ~ / ~ 0.1 MeV/cFn Fe Fp Bp p p p k T c T

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Gamow and Shoenberg: Casino da Urca in Rio de Janeiro

Neutrino theory of stellar collapse, Phys. Rev. 59, 539, 1941:

Unrecordable cooling agent

Photo andStory by R. Ruffini

Welcome to the Urca World - I

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Welcome to the Urca World - II