Effective Field Theory for Quantum Liquid in Dwarf Stars
Gregory Gabadadze, Rachel A. Rosen

TL;DR
This paper develops an effective field theory to describe quantum liquids in white dwarf stars, focusing on charged Bose-Einstein condensates of nuclei and their implications for star cooling and magnetic properties.
Contribution
It introduces a novel effective field theory framework for charged condensates in white dwarfs, analyzing their properties, screening effects, and observational signatures.
Findings
Charged condensates exhibit a mass gap and efficient impurity screening.
Condensation accelerates white dwarf cooling, observable in helium-core dwarfs.
Magnetic fields can be expelled or penetrate the condensate via vortices.
Abstract
An effective field theory approach is used to describe quantum matter at greater-than-atomic but less-than-nuclear densities which are encountered in white dwarf stars. We focus on the density and temperature regime for which charged spin-0 nuclei form an interacting charged Bose-Einstein condensate, while the neutralizing electrons form a degenerate fermi gas. After a brief introductory review, we summarize distinctive properties of the charged condensate, such as a mass gap in the bosonic sector as well as gapless fermionic excitations. Charged impurities placed in the condensate are screened with great efficiency, greater than in an equivalent uncondensed plasma. We discuss a generalization of the Friedel potential which takes into account bosonic collective excitations in addition to the fermionic excitations. We argue that the charged condensate could exist in helium-core white…
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