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Featured researches published by Madappa Prakash.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2001

Neutron Star Structure and the Equation of State

James M. Lattimer; Madappa Prakash

The structure of neutron stars is considered from theoretical and observational perspectives. We demonstrate an important aspect of neutron star structure: the neutron star radius is primarily determined by the behavior of the pressure of matter in the vicinity of nuclear matter equilibrium density. In the event that extreme softening does not occur at these densities, the radius is virtually independent of the mass and is determined by the magnitude of the pressure. For equations of state with extreme softening or those that are self-bound, the radius is more sensitive to the mass. Our results show that in the absence of extreme softening, a measurement of the radius of a neutron star more accurate than about 1 km will usefully constrain the equation of state. We also show that the pressure near nuclear matter density is primarily a function of the density dependence of the nuclear symmetry energy, while the nuclear incompressibility and skewness parameters play secondary roles. In addition, we show that the moment of inertia and the binding energy of neutron stars, for a large class of equations of state, are nearly universal functions of the stars compactness. These features can be understood by considering two analytic, yet realistic, solutions of Einsteins equations, by, respectively, Buchdahl and Tolman. We deduce useful approximations for the fraction of the moment of inertia residing in the crust, which is a function of the stellar compactness and, in addition, the pressure at the core-crust interface.


Science | 2004

The physics of neutron stars

James M. Lattimer; Madappa Prakash

Neutron stars are some of the densest manifestations of massive objects in the universe. They are ideal astrophysical laboratories for testing theories of dense matter physics and provide connections among nuclear physics, particle physics, and astrophysics. Neutron stars may exhibit conditions and phenomena not observed elsewhere, such as hyperon-dominated matter, deconfined quark matter, superfluidity and superconductivity with critical temperatures near 1010 kelvin, opaqueness to neutrinos, and magnetic fields in excess of 1013 Gauss. Here, we describe the formation, structure, internal composition, and evolution of neutron stars. Observations that include studies of pulsars in binary systems, thermal emission from isolated neutron stars, glitches from pulsars, and quasi-periodic oscillations from accreting neutron stars provide information about neutron star masses, radii, temperatures, ages, and internal compositions.


Physics Reports | 1997

Composition and structure of protoneutron stars

Madappa Prakash; Ignazio Bombaci; Manju Prakash; Paul J. Ellis; James M. Lattimer; Roland Knorren

Abstract We investigate the structure of neutron stars shortly after they are born, when the entropy per baryon is of order 1 or 2 and neutrinos are trapped on dynamical timescales. We find that the structure depends more sensitively on the composition of the star than on its entropy, and that the number of trapped neutrinos play an important role in determining the composition. Since the structure is chiefly determined by the pressure of the strongly interacting constituents and the nature of the strong interactions is poorly understood at high density, we consider several models of dense matter, including matter with strangeness-rich hyperons, a kaon condensate and quark matter. In all cases, the thermal effects for an entropy per baryon of order 2 or less are small when considering the maximum neutron star mass. Neutrino trapping, however, significantly changes the maximum mass due to the abundance of electrons. When matter is allowed to contain only nucleons and leptons, trapping decreases the maximum mass by an amount comparable to, but somewhat larger than, the increase due to finite entropy. When matter is allowed to contain strongly interacting negatively charged particles, in the form of strange baryons, a kaon condensate, or quarks, trapping instead results in an increase in the maximum mass, which adds to the effects of finite entropy. A net increase of order 0.2 M ⊙ occurs. The presence of negatively-charged particles has two major implications for the neutrino signature of gravitational collapse supernovae. First, the value of the maximum mass will decrease during the early evolution of a neutron star as it loses trapped neutrinos, so that if a black hole forms, it either does so immediately after the bounce (accretion being completed in a second or two) or it is delayed for a neutrino diffusion timescale of ~ 10 s . The latter case is most likely if the maximum mass of the hot star with trapped neutrinos is near 1.5 M ⊙ . In the absence of negatively-charged hadrons, black hole formation would be due to accretion and therefore is likely to occur only immediately after bounce. Second, the appearance of hadronic negative charges results in a general softening of the equation of state that may be observable in the neutrino luminosities and average energies. Further, these additional negative charges decrease the electron fraction and may be observed in the relative excess of electron neutrinos compared to other neutrinos.


Physics Reports | 2005

Isospin asymmetry in nuclei and neutron stars

Andrew W. Steiner; Madappa Prakash; James M. Lattimer; Paul J. Ellis

Abstract The roles of isospin asymmetry in nuclei and neutron stars are investigated using a range of potential and field-theoretical models of nucleonic matter. The parameters of these models are fixed by fitting the properties of homogeneous bulk matter and closed-shell nuclei. We discuss and unravel the causes of correlations among the neutron skin thickness in heavy nuclei, the pressure of beta-equilibrated matter at a density of 0.1 fm - 3 , the derivative of the nuclear symmetry energy at the same density and the radii of moderate mass neutron stars. Constraints on the symmetry properties of nuclear matter from the binding energies of nuclei are examined. The extent to which forthcoming neutron skin measurements will further delimit the symmetry properties is investigated. The impact of symmetry energy constraints for the mass and moment of inertia contained within neutron star crusts and the threshold density for the nucleon direct Urca process, all of which are potentially measurable, is explored. We also comment on the minimum neutron star radius, assuming that only nucleonic matter exists within the star.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1999

Evolution of Proto-Neutron Stars

José A. Pons; Sanjay Reddy; Madappa Prakash; James M. Lattimer; Juan A. Miralles

We study the thermal and chemical evolution during the Kelvin-Helmholtz phase of the birth of a neutron star, employing neutrino opacities that are consistently calculated with the underlying equation of state (EOS). Expressions for the diffusion coefficients appropriate for general relativistic neutrino transport in the equilibrium diffusion approximation are derived. The diffusion coefficients are evaluated using a field-theoretical finite-temperature EOS that includes the possible presence of hyperons. The variation of the diffusion coefficients is studied as a function of EOS and compositional parameters. We present results from numerical simulations of proto-neutron star cooling for internal stellar properties as well as emitted neutrino energies and luminosities. We discuss the influence of the initial stellar model, the total mass, the underlying EOS, and the addition of hyperons on the evolution of the proto-neutron star and on the expected signal in terrestrial detectors. We find that the differences in predicted luminosities and emitted neutrino energies do not depend much upon the details of the initial models or the underlying high-density EOS for early times (t<10 s), provided that opacities are calculated consistently with the EOS. The same holds true for models that allow for the presence of hyperons, except when the initial mass is significantly larger than the maximum mass for cold, catalyzed matter. For times larger than about 10 s, and prior to the occurrence of neutrino transparency, the neutrino luminosities decay exponentially with a time constant that is sensitive to the high-density properties of matter. We also find the average emitted neutrino energy increases during the first 5 s of evolution and then decreases nearly linearly with time. In general, increasing the proto-neutron star mass increases the average energy and the luminosity of neutrinos, as well as the overall evolutionary timescale. The influence of hyperons or variations in the dense matter EOS is increasingly important at later times. Metastable stars, those with hyperons that are unstable to collapse upon deleptonization, have relatively long evolution times, which increase the nearer the mass is to the maximum mass supportable by a cold, deleptonized star.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Rapid Cooling of the Neutron Star in Cassiopeia A Triggered by Neutron Superfluidity in Dense Matter

Dany Page; Madappa Prakash; James M. Lattimer; Andrew W. Steiner

We propose that the observed cooling of the neutron star in Cassiopeia A is due to enhanced neutrino emission from the recent onset of the breaking and formation of neutron Cooper pairs in the (3)P(2) channel. We find that the critical temperature for this superfluid transition is ≃0.5×10(9) K. The observed rapidity of the cooling implies that protons were already in a superconducting state with a larger critical temperature. This is the first direct evidence that superfluidity and superconductivity occur at supranuclear densities within neutron stars. Our prediction that this cooling will continue for several decades at the present rate can be tested by continuous monitoring of this neutron star.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2002

TOWARD A MASS AND RADIUS DETERMINATION OF THE NEARBY ISOLATED NEUTRON STAR RX J185635(3754

José A. Pons; Frederick M. Walter; James M. Lattimer; Madappa Prakash; R. Neuhäuser; Penghui An

We discuss efforts to determine the mass, radius, and surface composition of the nearby compact object RX J185635-3754 from its multiwavelength spectral energy distribution. We compute nonmagnetized model atmospheres and emergent spectra for selected compositions and gravities and discuss efforts to fit existing and new observational data from ROSAT, the Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer, and the Hubble Space Telescope. The spectral energy distribution matches that expected from a heavy-element-dominated atmosphere, but not from a uniform-temperature blackbody. Nonmagnetic light-element atmospheres cannot be simultaneously reconciled with the optical and X-ray data. We extend previous studies, which were limited to one fixed neutron star mass and radius. For uniform-temperature models dominated by heavy elements, the redshift z is constrained to be 0.3 z 0.4 and the best-fit mass and radius are M ≈ 0.9 M☉ and R ≈ 6 km (for a 61 pc distance). These values for M and R together are not permitted for any plausible equation of state, including that of a self-bound strange quark star. A simplified two-temperature model allows masses and radii up to about 50% larger, or a factor of 2 in the case of a blackbody. The observed luminosity is consistent with the thermal emission of an isolated neutron star no older than about 106 yr, the age inferred from available proper motion and parallax information.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

The Equation of State of Neutron Star Matter in Strong Magnetic Fields

Avery E. Broderick; Madappa Prakash; James M. Lattimer

We study the effects of very strong magnetic fields on the equation of state (EOS) in multicomponent, interacting matter by developing a covariant description for the inclusion of the anomalous magnetic moments of nucleons. For the description of neutron star matter, we employ a field-theoretical approach, which permits the study of several models that differ in their behavior at high density. Effects of Landau quantization in ultrastrong magnetic fields (B > 1014 G) lead to a reduction in the electron chemical potential and a substantial increase in the proton fraction. We find the generic result for B > 1018 G that the softening of the EOS caused by Landau quantization is overwhelmed by stiffening due to the incorporation of the anomalous magnetic moments of the nucleons. In addition, the neutrons become completely spin polarized. The inclusion of ultrastrong magnetic fields leads to a dramatic increase in the proton fraction, with consequences for the direct Urca process and neutron star cooling. The magnetization of the matter never appears to become very large, as the value of |H/B| never deviates from unity by more than a few percent. Our findings have implications for the structure of neutron stars in the presence of large frozen-in magnetic fields.


Nuclear Physics | 1994

Composition, structure and evolution of neutron stars with kaon condensates

Vesteinn Thorsson; Madappa Prakash; James M. Lattimer

Abstract We investigate the possibility of kaon condensation in the dense interior of neutron stars through the s-wave interaction of kaons with nucleons. We include nucleon-nucleon interactions by using simple parametrizations of realistic forces, and include electrons and muons in β-equilibrium. The equation of state above the condensate threshold is derived in the mean field approximation. The conditions under which kaon condensed cores undergo a transition to quark matter containing strange quarks are also established. The critical density for kaon condensation lies in the range (2.3–5.0) ϱ 0 where ϱ 0 = 0.16 fm −3 is the equilibrium density of nuclear matter. The critical density depends largely on the value of the strangeness content of the proton, the size of which is controversial. For too large a value of the strangeness content, matter with a kaon condensate is not sufficiently stiff to support the lower limit of 1.44 M ⊙ for a neutron star. Kaon condensation dramatically increases the proton abundance of matter and even allows positrons to exist inside the core. We also consider the case when neutrinos are trapped in the matter, a situation that applies to newly-formed neutron star matter that is less than about 10 s old. Neutrino trapping shifts both kaon condensation and the quark matter transition to higher densities than in the case of cold, catalyzed matter. A newly-formed neutron star is expected to have a rather low central density, the density rising only after mass accretion onto the star ends after a few seconds. Thus, it is likely that if kaon condensation and/or the quark-hadron phase transition occur, they do so only during or after the mass accretion and neutrino trapping stages. We suggest that neutrino observations from a galactic supernova may provide direct evidence for or against a condensate and/or a quark-hadron transition.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2001

Effects of strong magnetic fields on neutron star structure

Christian Y. Cardall; Madappa Prakash; James M. Lattimer

We study static neutron stars with poloidal magnetic fields and a simple class of electric current distributions consistent with the requirement of stationarity. For this class of electric current distributions, we find that magnetic fields are too large for static configurations to exist when the magnetic force pushes a sufficient amount of mass off-center that the gravitational force points outward near the origin in the equatorial plane. (In our coordinates an outward gravitational force corresponds to ∂ ln gtt/∂r > 0, where t and r are respectively time and radial coordinates and gtt is coefficient of dt2 in the line element.) For the equations of state (EOSs) employed in previous work, we obtain configurations of higher mass than had been reported; we also present results with more recent EOSs. For all EOSs studied, we find that the maximum mass among these static configurations with magnetic fields is noticeably larger than the maximum mass attainable by uniform rotation, and that for fixed values of baryon number the maximum mass configurations are all characterized by an off-center density maximum.

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Sanjay Reddy

University of Washington

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José A. Pons

Sapienza University of Rome

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Dany Page

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Raju Venugopalan

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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