Condensed Surfaces of Magnetic Neutron Stars, Thermal Surface Emission, and Particle Acceleration Above Pulsar Polar Caps
Zach Medin, Dong Lai

TL;DR
This paper investigates the conditions under which neutron star surfaces condense and form vacuum gaps, affecting thermal emission and particle acceleration, with implications for pulsar activity and magnetar observations.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative analysis of surface condensation and vacuum gap formation criteria in magnetic neutron stars, extending pair cascade models to superstrong magnetic fields.
Findings
Condensation occurs if surface thermal energy is less than 8% of cohesive energy.
Vacuum gaps form when magnetic and rotational axes are opposed and thermal energy is below 4% of cohesive energy.
Inverse Compton scattering is insufficient for pair production in most neutron star conditions.
Abstract
For sufficiently strong magnetic fields and/or low temperatures, the neutron star surface may be in a condensed state with little gas or plasma above it. Such surface condensation can significantly affect the thermal emission from isolated neutron stars, and may lead to the formation of a charge-depleted acceleration zone ("vacuum gap") in the magnetosphere above the stellar polar cap. Using the latest results on the cohesive property of magnetic condensed matter, we quantitatively determine the conditions for surface condensation and vacuum gap formation in magnetic neutron stars. We find that condensation can occur if the thermal energy kT of the neutron star surface is less than about 8% of its cohesive energy Q_s, and that a vacuum gap can form if the neutron star's rotation axis and magnetic moment point in opposite directions and kT is less than about 4% of Q_s. Thus, vacuum gap…
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