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  5. Probing the neutron star interior and the Equation of State of cold dense matter with the SKA
 

Probing the neutron star interior and the Equation of State of cold dense matter with the SKA

Journal
POS PROCEEDINGS OF SCIENCE  
Date Issued
2015
Author(s)
Watts, A.
•
Espinoza, C. M.
•
Xu, R.
•
Andersson, N.
•
Antoniadis, J.
•
Antonopoulou, D.
•
Buchner, S.
•
Datta, S.
•
Demorest, P.
•
Freire, P.
•
Hessels, J.
•
Margueron, J.
•
Oertel, M.
•
Patruno, A.
•
POSSENTI, ANDREA  
•
Ransom, S.
•
Stairs, I.
•
Stappers, B.
DOI
10.22323/1.215.0043
Abstract
With an average density higher than the nuclear density, neutron stars (NS) provide a unique test-ground for nuclear physics, quantum chromodynamics (QCD), and nuclear superfluidity. Determination of the fundamental interactions that govern matter under such extreme conditions is one of the major unsolved problems of modern physics, and -- since it is impossible to replicate these conditions on Earth -- a major scientific motivation for SKA. The most stringent observational constraints come from measurements of NS bulk properties: each model for the microscopic behaviour of matter predicts a specific density-pressure relation (its `Equation of state', EOS). This generates a unique mass-radius relation which predicts a characteristic radius for a large range of masses and a maximum mass above which NS collapse to black holes. It also uniquely predicts other bulk quantities, like maximum spin frequency and moment of inertia. The SKA, in Phase 1 and particularly in Phase 2 will, thanks to the exquisite timing precision enabled by its raw sensitivity, and surveys that dramatically increase the number of sources: 1) Provide many more precise NS mass measurements (high mass NS measurements are particularly important for ruling out EOS models); 2) Allow the measurement of the NS moment of inertia in highly relativistic binaries such as the Double Pulsar; 3) Greatly increase the number of fast-spinning NS, with the potential discovery of spin frequencies above those allowed by some EOS models; 4) Improve our knowledge of new classes of binary pulsars such as black widows and redbacks (which may be massive as a class) through sensitive broad-band radio observations; and 5) Improve our understanding of dense matter superfluidity and the state of matter in the interior through the study of rotational glitches, provided that an ad-hoc campaign is developed.
Coverage
Advancing Astrophysics with the Square Kilometre Array (AASKA14)
Volume
215
Start page
43
Conferenece
Advancing Astrophysics with the Square Kilometre Array (AASKA14)
Conferenece place
Giardini Naxos, Italy
Conferenece date
9 -13 June, 2014
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/23627
Url
https://pos.sissa.it/215/043
Issn Identifier
1824-8039
Ads BibCode
2015aska.confE..43W
Rights
open.access
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