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Debades Bandyopadhyay

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Title: Debades Bandyopadhyay


1

R-modes of neutron stars with exotic matter
  • Debades Bandyopadhyay
  • Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics
  • Kolkata, India
  • With
  • Debarati Chatterjee (SINP)

2
Outline of the talk
3

Pulsation modes of neutron stars
  • Large number of families of pulsation modes
  • Modes are classified according to restoring
    forces acting on the fluid motion
  • Important modes among them are,
  • f-mode associated with global oscillation of the
    fluid
  • g-mdoe due to buoyancy and p-mode due to pressure
    gradient
  • w-mode associated with the spacetime
  • Finally, the inertial r-mode.

4
R-modes
  • R-modes derive its name from (R)ossby waves
  • Rossby waves are inertial waves
  • Inertial waves are possible in rotating fluids
    and propagate through the bulk of the fluid
  • The Coriolis force is the restoring force in this
    case
  • Responsible for regulating sipns of rapidly
    rotating neutron stars/ accreting pulsars in
    LMXBs
  • Possible sources of gravitational radiation

5
Gravitational Radiation Reaction driven
instability
  • For rapidly rotating and oscillating neutron
    stars, a mode that moves backward relative to
    the corotating frame appears as a forward
    moving mode relative to the inertial observer
  • The prograde mode in the inertial frame has
    positive angular momentum whereas that of the
    retrograde mode in the corotating frame is
    negative
  • Gravitational radiation removes positive angular
    momentum from the retrograde mode making its
    angular momentum increasingly negative and leads
    to the Chandrasekhar-Friedman-Schutz (CFS)
    instability

CreditYoshida Rezzolla
6
Growth vs Damping
  • Bulk viscosity arises because the pressure and
    density variations associated with the mode
    oscillation drive the fluid away from chemical
    equilibrium. It estimates the energy dissipated
    from the fluid motion as weak interaction tries
    to re-establish equilibrium
  • Viscosity tends to counteract the growth of the
    GW instability
  • Viscosity would stabilize any mode whose growth
    time is longer than the viscous damping time
  • There must exist a critical angular velocity ?c
    above which the perturbation will grow, and below
    which it will be damped by viscosity
  • If ? gt ?c , the rate of radiation of angular
    momentum in gravity waves will rapidly slow the
    star, till it reaches ?c and can rotate stably

7
Structure of a neutron star
  • Atmosphere (atoms) n ? 10 4 g/cm3
  • Outer crust ( free electrons, lattice of
    nuclei ) 10 4 - 4 x 1011 g/cm3
  • Inner crust ( lattice of nuclei with free
    electrons and neutrons)
  • Outer core (atomic particle fluid)
  • Inner core ( exotic subatomic particles? ) n ?
    10 14 g/cm3

Credit D. Page
8
Damping of r-modes
P.B. Jones, PRD 64 (2001) 084003
9
Coefficient of Bulk Viscosity ?
  • Ref Landau and Lifshitz,
    Fluid Mehanics,2nd ed. ( Oxford,1999)
  • Lindblom ,Owen and
    Morsink , Phys. Rev. D 65, 063006
  • p -?p - ? ? . v
    ...(1)
  • Perturbation of particle no.density, ? n n
    n 0
  • Time dependence of the perturbation e -
    i? t
  • - ? ?. ? v - i ? ? ? n /n
    ...(2)
  • Let fluid variable x characterize the
    process that produced BV
  • ? t x v .? x - ( x - ?x ) / ?
    (3)
  • where ? is the relaxation timescale
    for the process
  • As x oscillates about the background
    equilibrium value x0 ,
  • (? t v .? ) ( x - x 0 ) - i ? ( x
    - x 0 ) (4)
  • ? x x 0 ( x - ?x ) / i ? ? (?x x 0
    ) / ( 1 - i ? ? ) (5)

10
  • As the particle no. density changes, the
    fluid variable?x
  • changes as
  • ?x x 0 d?x (?n n 0 ) d?x ?
    n (6)
  • d n
    d n
  • by definition , ?n n
  • ?p - p 0 ( ? p ) ( ? p ) . d ?x
    ...(7)
  • ? n x ? x
    n d n
  • p - p 0 ( ? p ) 1
    ( ? p ) . d ?x ...(8)
  • ? n x (1 - i ?
    ? ) ? x n d n
  • p -?p i ? ? ( ? p )
    . d?x ? n ...(9)
  • (1 - i ? ? ) ?
    x n d n
  • ? - n ? ( ? p
    ) d?x ...(10)
  • ( 1- i ? ? ) ?
    x n d n

11
Hyperons
  • Hyperons produced at the cost of nucleons
  • n p ? p ? K0 , n n ? n ? - K
  • Chemical equilibrium through weak processes
  • p e- ? ? ? e , ? e- ? ? - ? e
  • General condition for ?-equilibrium
  • ? i bi ?
    n - qi ? e

12
Hadronic Phase
13
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15
Composition of hyperon matter

16
EOS including hyperons
17
Coefficient of Bulk Viscosity ?
Landau and Lifshitz, Fluid
Mehanics,2nd ed. ( Oxford,1999)
Lindblom and Owen, Phys. Rev. D 65, 063006
  • ? - n ? ( ? p
    ) d?x
  • ( 1- i ? ? ) ?
    x n d n
  • infinite frequency (fast) adiabatic
    index
  • ?? n ( ? p )
  • p ? n x
  • zero frequency (slow) adiabatic index
  • ? 0 ( ? p ) ( ? p ) .
    d?x
  • ? n x ?
    x n d n
  • ?? - ? 0 - nb 2 ? p
    d?x
  • p ? nn
    d nb
  • Re ? p ( ?? - ?0 ) ?
  • 1 (? ?
    )2

18
  • We consider the non-leptonic reaction, n p
    ? p ?
  • xn nn / nB fraction of baryons
    comprised of neutrons
  • ( ? t v .? ) xn - ( xn -? xn )
    / ? - ? n / nB
  • where ? n is the production rate of
    neutrons / volume,
  • which is proportional to the chemical
    potential imbalance
  • ?? ? - ??
  • The relaxation time is given by
  • 1 ?? ?? .
  • ? ?? nB ?xn
  • where ? xn xn -? xn
  • The reaction rate ? may be calculated using
  • 4

19
  • where
  • ?M??2 4 GF 2 sin2 2? c 2 mn mp2 m? (1-
    g np2 ) (1- gp?2)
  • - mn
    mp p2 . p4 (1 - g np2 ) (1 gp?2)
  • - mp
    m? p1 . p3 (1 g np2 ) (1 - gp?2)
  • p1 . p2 p3 . p4 (1 g
    np2 ) (1 gp?2) 4 gnp gp?
  • p1 . p4 p2 . p3 (1 g np2
    ) (1 gp?2) - 4 gnp gp?
  • After performing the energy and angular
    integrals,
  • ? 1 lt?M?2 gt p4 (kT)2 ? ?
  • 192? 3
  • where lt?M?2 gt is the angle-averaged value of
    ?M?2
  • 1 ( kT )2 p? lt
    ?M??2 gt ??
  • ? 192? 3
    nB ?xn

20
Temperature dependence of relaxation time
21
Hyperon bulk viscosity coefficient
22
r-mode damping time ?B(h)
  • The rotating frame energy E for r-modes is
  • R
  • E ½ ? 2 ? 2 1 ? ? r 2 dr
  • R2 0
  • Lindblom , Owen and Morsink, Phys Rev
    Lett. 80 (1998) 4843
  • Time derivative of corotating frame energy due
    to BV is

  • R
  • dE - 4 ? ? Re? ???.? v?²? r ² dr
  • dt BV 0
  • The angle averaged expansion squared is
    determined numerically
  • ???.? v?²? ?² ? ² ( r )6 1 0.86
    ( r )2 ( ? ² )2
  • 690 R
    R ? G?
  • Lindblom , Mendell and Owen, Phys Rev D
    60 (1999) 064006
  • The time scale ?BV on which bulk
    viscosity damps the mode is
  • 1 - 1 dE
  • ?BV 2E dt BV

23
Critical Angular Velocity
  • imaginary part of the frequency of the r-mode
  • 1 - 1 1
    1
  • ?r ?GR ?BV
    ?B(u)
  • where ?GR timescale over which GR
    drives mode unstable

  • R
  • 1 131072 ? ? 6 ?0 ? (r) r
    6 dr
  • ?GR 164025
  • ?B(u) Bulk viscosity timescale due to
    Modified Urca
  • process of
    nucleons
  • Mode stable when ?r gt 0 , unstable when ?r lt 0
  • Critical angular velocity ?c 1 0

  • ?r
  • Above ?c the perturbation will grow, below ?c it
    is damped by viscosity
  • If ? gt ?c , the rate of radiation of angular
    momentum in gravity waves will rapidly slow the
    star, till it reaches ?c and can rotate stably

24
Evolutionary sequences
25
Critical Angular Velocity
26
Bose-Einstein condensates
  • Processes responsible for p-wave pion condensate/
    s-wave kaon condensate in compact stars
  • n ? p ? - n ? p K -
  • e - ? ? - ?e e - ? K - ?e
  • Threshold condition for Bose
  • condensation of mesons
  • For K - ??K - ? K - ? e
  • For ? - ??? - ? e
  • S Banik , D. Bandyopadhyay, Phys Rev C64 (2001)
    055805
  • S Banik , D. Bandyopadhyay, Phys Rev C66 (2002)
    065801

27
Equation of State
  • J.Schaffner and I.N.Mishustin, PRC
    53,1416 (1996)

28
N.K. Glendenning and J. Schaffner-Bielich, PRL
81(1998) PRC 60 (1999)S. Banik and D.
Bandyopadhyay, PRC 64, 055805 (2001)
29
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31
  • We consider the process n ? p K -
  • M ?up ( p2 ) A
    ?5 B un( p1 ) ?
  • Determination of A and B using SU(3)
  • weak nonleptonic decay of octet hyperons (? ,?
    ,? ) can be described by processes
  • S B ? B P
  • ?Y 1, ?I ½ ? spurion
    transforms like ?6
  • J.Schaffner-Bielich, R.
    Matiello and H. Sorge, nucl-th/9908043
  • General SU(3) symmetry and CP
    invariance results in Lagrangian
  • L D Tr?B B P, ?6 F Tr?B P, ?6
    B
  • G Tr?B P ?5 B ?6 H Tr?B ?6
    ?5 B P J Tr?B P, ?6 ?5 B
  • ? D 4.72 ,F -1.62 (in units of
    10-7 ) for A amplitudes and
  • G 40.0 ,H47.8 , J
    -7.1 (in units of 10-7 ) for B amplitudes
  • gives good agreement with
    experimental data

32
  • We consider the process n ? p K -
  • The relaxation time is given by
  • 1 ? ?? .
  • ? ?? ? nnK
  • The reaction rate ? may be
    calculated using
  • ? 1 ? d 3p1 d 3p2 d 3p3 ?M?2 ?
    (3)( p1- p2 - p3 ) F(?i) ? (?1-?2 -?3 )
  • 8 (2?)5 ?1 ?2 ?3
  • where
  • ?M?2 2 (? n ? p - pFn pFp mn mp )
    ?A?2 (? n ? p - pFn pFp mn mp ) ?B?2
  • A -1.62 x 10 -7 , B
    -7.1 x10 -7
  • After performing the energy and angular
    integrals,

33
Composition of Bose condensed matter
34
EOS with antikaon condensate
35
Difference in adiabatic indices

36
Relaxation time
37
Bulk viscosity profile

38
Modified Urca Bulk viscosity
  • Bulk viscosity coefficient due to modified Urca
    process of nucleons
  • ?B(u) 6 x 10 25 ? c2 T
    6 ?r 2
  • Lindblom , Owen and
    Morsink , Phys. Rev. Lett. 80 (1998) 4843

39
Critical Angular Velocity
40
Hyperon bulk viscosity in superfluid matter
  • Significant suppression of hyperon bulk viscosity
    due to neutron, proton or hyperon superfluidity
  • In this situation, hyperon bulk viscosity may not
    be able to damp the r-mode
  • The hyperon bulk viscosity due to the process
  • n p ? p? in kaon condensed matter and its
    role on r-modes

41
Composition of condensed matter
42

43

44

45
Conclusions
  • The bulk viscosity coefficient due to the weak
    process involving antikaon condensate is several
    orders of magnitude smaller than the hyperon bulk
    viscosity
  • The bulk coefficient in the former case may not
    damp the r-mode instability
  • Hyperon bulk viscosity is suppressed in a Bose
    condensate
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