Neutron stars and beyond

15
Neutron stars and beyond There it is! Cassiopeia A…the remnant of the supernova of 168

description

Neutron stars and beyond. There it is!. Cassiopeia A…the remnant of the supernova of 1680. How many pulsars (neutron stars) are there in the sky?. http://www.atnf.csiro.au/research/pulsar/psrcat. Neutron stars: from exotica to numerous astronomical objects. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Neutron stars and beyond

Page 1: Neutron stars and beyond

Neutron stars and beyond

There it is!

Cassiopeia A…the remnant of the supernova of 1680

Page 3: Neutron stars and beyond

Neutron stars: from exotica to numerous astronomical objects

Page 4: Neutron stars and beyond

A final mystery…pulsar

masses are nearly all AT the Chandrasekhar

Limit

Page 5: Neutron stars and beyond

Neutron Stars – Extreme Objects

Does it get any weirder?

Page 6: Neutron stars and beyond

Basic physics suggests a way: the maximum mass of a neutron star

What happensHere?

Page 7: Neutron stars and beyond

Black Holes in Theory: you check in, but you don’t check out

• Theoretical ways of describing them

• (A) Classical physics: an object with escape speed greater than the speed of light (> c)

• (B) General Relativity and Black Holes

Page 8: Neutron stars and beyond

Black Holes in classical physics: Given a mass M, how compact (squished) does it

have to be?

Schwarzschild Radius

Rs = 2GMc2

Page 9: Neutron stars and beyond

Cramming something inside the Scharzschild Radius extreme matter

Example: Planet Earth

M= 5.97E+24 kilograms

Rs = 9E-03 meters = 0.9cm !!!!

DEMO

But always ask: do they exist?

Page 10: Neutron stars and beyond

General Relativity and Black Holes

General Relativity: a theory of gravity

Basic mathematical object: 4 dimensional spacetime

Page 11: Neutron stars and beyond

Basic Ingredients of General Relativity

• (A) Objects move between 2 points in spacetime on the shortest path between those points (geodesics)

• (B) The presence of mass warps or bends spacetime

The Einstein Field Equations

Page 12: Neutron stars and beyond

General Relativistic Black Holes

For sufficient concentration of mass in sufficiently small region,

there is a rip or hole poked in spacetime

Schwarzschild Radius

DEMO with analogs

Page 13: Neutron stars and beyond

But do they exist? Is nature capable of producing such

strange objects?

Question: what kind of astronomical objects, with what kind of quantitative properties,

would you look for?

Page 14: Neutron stars and beyond

They do exist, in two types

Little Ones……and……

Page 15: Neutron stars and beyond

……Big Ones