Astromaterial Science and Nuclear Pasta
M. E. Caplan, C. J. Horowitz

TL;DR
This paper introduces 'astromaterial science' as the study of ultra-dense materials in space, focusing on crystalline lattices and nuclear pasta in neutron stars, and discusses how molecular dynamics simulations help interpret astronomical observations.
Contribution
It defines astromaterial science and explores properties of dense astrophysical materials like Coulomb crystals and nuclear pasta using molecular dynamics simulations.
Findings
Coulomb crystals may create neutron star 'mountains' detectable by gravitational waves.
Nuclear pasta phases influence neutrino transport and thermal properties of neutron star crusts.
Simulations reveal complex shapes like lasagna and spaghetti in nuclear matter, analogous to biological structures.
Abstract
We define `astromaterial science' as the study of materials in astronomical objects that are qualitatively denser than materials on earth. Astromaterials can have unique properties related to their large density, though they may be organized in ways similar to more conventional materials. By analogy to terrestrial materials, we divide our study of astromaterials into hard and soft and discuss one example of each. The hard astromaterial discussed here is a crystalline lattice, such as the Coulomb crystals in the interior of cold white dwarfs and in the crust of neutron stars, while the soft astromaterial is nuclear pasta found in the inner crusts of neutron stars. In particular, we discuss how molecular dynamics simulations have been used to calculate the properties of astromaterials to interpret observations of white dwarfs and neutron stars. Coulomb crystals are studied to understand…
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