1106.1661 (C. J. Horowitz)
C. J. Horowitz
Neutron rich matter is central to many fundamental questions in nuclear
physics and astrophysics. Moreover, this material is being studied with an
extraordinary variety of new tools such as the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams
(FRIB) and the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (LIGO). We
describe the Lead Radius Experiment (PREX) that uses parity violating electron
scattering to measure the neutron radius in $^{208}$Pb. This has important
implications for neutron stars and their crusts. We discuss X-ray observations
of neutron star radii. These also have important implications for neutron rich
matter. Gravitational waves (GW) open a new window on neutron rich matter. They
come from sources such as neutron star mergers, rotating neutron star
mountains, and collective r-mode oscillations. Using large scale molecular
dynamics simulations, we find neutron star crust to be very strong. It can
support mountains on rotating neutron stars large enough to generate detectable
gravitational waves. Finally, neutrinos from core collapse supernovae (SN)
provide another, qualitatively different probe of neutron rich matter.
Neutrinos escape from the surface of last scattering known as the
neutrino-sphere. This is a low density warm gas of neutron rich matter.
Observations of neutrinos can probe nucleosyntheses in SN. Simulations of SN
depend on the equation of state (EOS) of neutron rich matter. We discuss a new
EOS based on virial and relativistic mean field calculations. We believe that
combing astronomical observations using photos, GW, and neutrinos, with
laboratory experiments on nuclei, heavy ion collisions, and radioactive beams
will fundamentally advance our knowledge of compact objects in the heavens, the
dense phases of QCD, the origin of the elements, and of neutron rich matter.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1106.1661
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