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Neutron star measurements place limits on color superconductivity in dense quark matter

Neutron star measurements place limits on color superconductivity in dense quark matter
Ground-based radio telescopes, gravitational wave detectors, and a space-based X-ray telescope (right) all measure neutron stars (top left, shown merging), lending insight into the pairing of different-colored quarks in dense matter (bottom left). Credit: Rachel Steinhorst, NASA/Roscosmos, and Caltech/MIT/LIGO Lab

At extremely high densities, quarks are expected to form pairs, as electrons do in a superconductor. This high-density quark behavior is called color superconductivity. The strength of pairing inside a color superconductor is difficult to calculate, but scientists have long known the strength's relationship to the pressure of dense matter. Measuring the size of neutron stars and how they deform during mergers tells us their pressure and confirms that neutron stars are indeed the densest visible matter in the universe.

In a recent study, researchers used neutron star observations to infer the properties of quark matter at even higher densities where it is certain to be a color superconductor. This yields the first empirical upper bound on the strength of color superconducting pairing.

The work is in the journal Âé¶¹ÒùÔºical Review Letters.

Measurements from NICER, LIGO/Virgo, and ground-based radio telescopes provide insight into the pressures and densities at the cores of various , each with some uncertainty. In this study, researchers performed a statistical analysis of these measurements to extract a range of possible pressures at quark-matter densities.

Scientists know what the of quark matter at these high densities would be without considering quark pairing, so the range of possible deviation from that baseline provided this study's researchers with the range of pairing effects that are consistent with the neutron star observations. This allowed the researchers to extract empirical bounds on the strength of color superconducting pairing.

Theoretical physicists have studied color superconductivity for more than two decades. However, this study's connection to neutron star observations is the first-ever empirical limit on the pairing strength of color superconductors. This opens a new research frontier for using the astrophysics of neutron stars to learn about the physics of quark matter.

More information: Aleksi Kurkela et al, Astrophysical Equation-of-State Constraints on the Color-Superconducting Gap, Âé¶¹ÒùÔºical Review Letters (2024).

Citation: Neutron star measurements place limits on color superconductivity in dense quark matter (2025, January 14) retrieved 24 May 2025 from /news/2025-01-neutron-star-limits-superconductivity-dense.html
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