1 / 16

Neutron Stars as Cosmological Laboratories of Dark Matter

Neutron Stars as Cosmological Laboratories of Dark Matter. Shmulik Balberg, The Hebrew University. in collaboration with G. Farrar (NYU). Outline:. Dark matter microphysics – A renaissance. Possible constraints from neutron stars on. “active” dark matter . “passive” dark matter.

obert
Télécharger la présentation

Neutron Stars as Cosmological Laboratories of Dark Matter

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Neutron Stars as Cosmological Laboratories of Dark Matter Shmulik Balberg, The Hebrew University in collaboration with G. Farrar (NYU)

  2. Outline: • Dark matter microphysics – A renaissance • Possible constraints from neutron stars on • “active” dark matter • “passive” dark matter

  3. (Most of the) Dark matter is … • … (probably) COLD (nonrelativistic at decoupling) • … very hard to detect… • … ? • … not in compact objects (MACHO search) • … not in planets or brown dwarfs • … not in uncondensed gas …Nonbaryonic at all!(*) (Big Bang Nucleosynthesis, CMB anisotropies)

  4. Dark matter candidates: 1999 • axions, neutralinos (~ interaction free) 2000 Observational motivation for interacting dark matter (Spergel & Steinhardt, PRL 84, 3760 (2000)) Self-interacting, mirror, warm, annihilating, multicomponent, fuzzy, fluid, decaying…… (See Ostriker & Steinhardt, SCIENCE 2003)

  5. “Active” Dark Matter i.e. Forms in neutron stars through chemical equilibrium: Equation of State P(e) M, R, I, Wmax • n-emissivity  thermal history • Bulk viscosity  R-modes • electric conductivity  magnetic field evolution • proto-NS evolution  NS-black hole connection

  6. Active dark matter candidates • stable strange quark matter • A light stable dibaryon (H) Ruled out! (EoS too soft – Glendenning & Schaffner-Bielich 1998) • A light stable supersymmetric baryon (S0) Certainly possible! (Mmax1.7-1.8M) due to strong repulsive interactions (Balberg, Farrar & Piran 2001)

  7. Axions rapid cooling? n+nn+n+A; LAT6 (limits Axion-nucleon coupling) (Iwamoto 1984) • ……

  8. “Passive” Dark Matter i.e. cannot form in neutron stars is accreted from environment: Condensation in NS  destabilize • heating by in bulk or near surface annihilation • direct observation of excess high energy photons/neutrinos

  9. How WIMPs destabilize a neutron star(Goldman and Nussinov 1989) • WIMPs accrete onto the neutron star • WIMPs thermalize and condense to a thermal radius, (GM/Rth)v2 • WIMPs become self-gravitating when MX(Rth)>Mbar(Rth) • Self-gravitating WIMPs might collapse to a black hole GN89: WIMPS – dM/dt100 gm sec-1 For Tc=105°K, MBH1018gm, sWN~10-38 cm2Neutron stars live tNS<109yrs

  10. To be more specific: need very cold star T105 K Marginal (unless Bose-Einstein condensation accelerates collapse to a black hole)

  11. Accumulate a self-gravitating WIMP mass (Balberg and Farrar in prep) • BF03 – if sWN0, gravitational relaxation (+ dynamical friction): no fixed “Rth” Work in Progress…. sWN~0 Bosonic WIMPs are excluded! • dM/dt for interacting DM: ~104-105gm/sec Collapse depends on WIMP and WIMP-N interactions

  12. Summary: Neutron star theory and observation may be useful for constraining dark matter candidates Examples: • A light bosonic baryon must have ~0 attractive component • Bosonic WIMPs with sWN~0 destabilize old neutron stars – ruled out?

  13. kBT~(GMX/Rth) rbar1015 gm/cm3 Accumulate a self-gravitating WIMP mass (I) • accretion rate (dM/dt) GS89: non-interacting - ~100gm/sec • relaxation velocity GS89: thermalize with nucleons kBT - ~105K • Self-gravitating mass GS89: MX=4p/3(Rth)3rbar

  14.  Dark matter halos

  15. Equilibrium composition of dense matter • “soup” of nucleons, leptons, other particles • local charge neutrality (r+=r-) • chemical equilibrium to weak interactions, e.g., • np+e ; mn=mp+me • evolved neutron stars: no n’s, T=0

  16. WIMP induced instability of a neutron star (Goldman and Nussinov 1989)

More Related