15 February 2007
15 February 2007
Speaker: Feryal Ozel (University of Arizona)
Title:Peeking into a Neutron Star: Neutrons, Condensates, or Quarks?
Abstract:
Neutron stars are the densest objects in the universe and may contain
hyperon-dominated matter, condensed mesons, or even deconfined or
strange quark matter. Because of their low temperatures and high
chemical potentials, the physical conditions in their interiors differ
greatly from the dense conditions of the early universe or those
achieved at hadron colliders. This region of the QCD phase diagram can
only be probed through astrophysical observations that measure the
mass and radius of neutron stars. For decades, this effort has been
hampered by a number of model uncertainties as well as by the lack of
accurate measurements of different spectroscopic phenomena from a
single source that would break the degeneracies between the neutron
star parameters of interest. I discuss how we can now overcome these
problems by combining recent developments in our understanding of
neutron star atmospheres with observations of distinct phenomena from
the same neutron star source. In particular, I will present a unique
measurement of the mass and radius of the neutron star in EXO
0748-676. The high inferred mass and large radius of this neutron star
rule out all the soft equations of state of neutron star matter.
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