Nucleon-quark mixed matter and neutron star EOS
Abstract
The nucleon-quark mixed matter is defined in the Brueckner-Hartree-Fock framework, in which quark densities are determined by equilibrium conditions between nucleon and quark chemical potentials, and nucleon-quark interactions play critical roles for resulting EoSs (equation of state). The two models of EoSs are derived from the nucleon-quark mixed matter (NQMM): The NQMM-A EoSs are based on the simple assumption that nucleons and free quarks occupy their respective Fermi levels and their Fermi spheres overlap from each other. In NQMM-B EoSs, the quark Fermi repulsion effect is incorporated on the basis of quakyonic matter, meaning that the nucleon Fermi levels are pushed up from the quark Fermi sphere by the Pauli exclusion principle. For the NQMM-A EoSs, the neutron-star mass-radius (MR) curves are pushed up above the region of M 2.1M and R2.1M 12.5 km indicated by the recent observations, as the qN repulsions increase. For the NQMM-B EoSs, the similar results are obtained by the combined contributions from the qN repulsion and the quark Fermi repulsion. In both models of EoSs, the important roles of the qN di-quark exchange repulsions are demonstrated to reproduce reasonable values of Mmax and R2.1M.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.