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Journal ArticleDOI

On Massive neutron cores

J. R. Oppenheimer, +1 more
- 15 Feb 1939 - 
- Vol. 55, Iss: 4, pp 374-381
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors studied the gravitational equilibrium of masses of neutrons, using the equation of state for a cold Fermi gas, and general relativity, and showed that for masses under 1/3, there are no static equilibrium solutions.
Abstract
It has been suggested that, when the pressure within stellar matter becomes high enough, a new phase consisting of neutrons will be formed. In this paper we study the gravitational equilibrium of masses of neutrons, using the equation of state for a cold Fermi gas, and general relativity. For masses under $\frac{1}{3}\ensuremath{\bigodot}$ only one equilibrium solution exists, which is approximately described by the nonrelativistic Fermi equation of state and Newtonian gravitational theory. For masses $\frac{1}{3}\ensuremath{\bigodot}lml\frac{3}{4}\ensuremath{\bigodot}$ two solutions exist, one stable and quasi-Newtonian, one more condensed, and unstable. For masses greater than $\frac{3}{4}\ensuremath{\bigodot}$ there are no static equilibrium solutions. These results are qualitatively confirmed by comparison with suitably chosen special cases of the analytic solutions recently discovered by Tolman. A discussion of the probable effect of deviations from the Fermi equation of state suggests that actual stellar matter after the exhaustion of thermonuclear sources of energy will, if massive enough, contract indefinitely, although more and more slowly, never reaching true equilibrium.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Constraining compact star properties with nuclear saturation parameters

TL;DR: In this article, a set of hadronic equations of state derived from relativistic density-functional theory and constrained by terrestrial experiments, astrophysical observations, in particular by the GW170817 event, and chiral effective field theory of neutron matter is used to explore the sensitivity of the EoS parameterization on the few nuclear-matter characteristics defined at the saturation density.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cooling of Small and Massive Hyperonic Stars

TL;DR: In this paper, cooling simulations for isolated neutron stars using recently developed equations of state for their core are obtained from new parametrizations of the FSU2 relativistic mean-field functional that reproduce the properties of nuclear matter and finite nuclei, while fulfilling the restrictions on high-density matter deduced from heavy-ion collisions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nucleons, nuclear matter and quark matter: a unified NJL approach

TL;DR: In this article, an effective quark model was used to describe both hadronic and deconfined quark matter and showed that the internal properties of the nucleon have important implications for the properties of these systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new class of relativistic model of compact stars of embedding class I

TL;DR: In this paper, a relativistic anisotropic compact star model with a spherically symmetric metric of embedding class one has been constructed and the model is free from central singularities and satisfies all energy conditions.
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