ABSTRACT

Pulsars, generally accepted to be rotating neutron stars, are dense, neutron-packed remnants of massive stars that blew apart in supernova explosions. They are typically about 10 kilometers across and spin rapidly, often making several hundred rotations per second. Depending on star mass, gravity compresses the matter in the cores of pulsars up to more than ten times the density of ordinary atomic nuclei, thus providing a high-pressure environment in which numerous particle processes, from hyperon population to quark deconfinement to the formation of Boson condensates, may compete with each other. There are theoretical suggestions of even more ""exotic"" processes inside pulsars, such as the formation of absolutely stable strange quark matter, a configuration of matter even more stable than the most stable atomic nucleus, ^T56Fe. In the latter event, pulsars would be largely composed of pure quark matter, eventually enveloped in nuclear crust matter.

These features combined with the tremendous recent progress in observational radio and x-ray astronomy make pulsars nearly ideal probes for a wide range of physical studies, complementing the quest of the behavior of superdense matter in terrestrial collider experiments. Written by an eminent author, Pulsars as Astrophysical Laboratories for Nuclear and Particle Physics gives a reliable account of the present status of such research, which naturally is to be performed at the interface between nuclear physics, particle physics, and Einstein's theory of relativity.

chapter 1|22 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|18 pages

Overview of relativistic stars

chapter 3|19 pages

Observed neutron star properties

chapter 4|9 pages

Physics of neutron star matter

chapter 8|10 pages

Quark–hadron phase transition

chapter 10|22 pages

Partial-wave expansions

chapter 12|48 pages

Models for the equation of state

chapter 13|10 pages

General relativity in a nutshell

chapter 14|37 pages

Structure equations of non-rotating stars

chapter 15|31 pages

Structure equations of rotating stars

chapter 16|35 pages

Criteria for maximum rotation

chapter 17|39 pages

Models of rotating neutron stars

chapter 18|59 pages

Strange quark matter stars

chapter 19|43 pages

Cooling of neutron and strange stars