Probing Strong Field $f(R)$ Gravity and Ultra-Dense Matter with the Structure and Thermal Evolution of Neutron Stars
Mart\'in Nava-Callejas, Dany Page, Mikhail V. Beznogov

TL;DR
This study investigates how modifications in $f(R)$ gravity theories affect neutron star structure and thermal evolution, finding that microphysics uncertainties overshadow gravity modifications in influencing observable properties.
Contribution
It provides a detailed numerical analysis of neutron star thermal evolution within $f(R)=R+ ext{constant} imes R^2$ gravity, highlighting the limited impact of gravity modifications compared to microphysics uncertainties.
Findings
Gravity modifications have minimal impact on neutron star cooling.
Microphysics uncertainties dominate the thermal evolution.
Gravity deviations in the studied $f(R)$ family do not significantly alter previous conclusions.
Abstract
Thermal evolution of neutron stars is studied in the theory of gravity. We first describe the equations of stellar structure and evolution for a spherically symmetric spacetime plus a perfect fluid at rest. We then present numerical results for the structure of neutron stars using four nucleonic dense matter equations of state and a series of gravity theories for ranging from zero, i.e., General Relativity, up to cm. We emphasize properties of these neutron star models that are of relevance for their thermal evolution as the threshold masses for enhanced neutrino emission by the direct Urca process, the proper volume of the stellar cores where this neutrino emission is allowed, the crust thickness, and the surface gravitational acceleration that directly impact the observable effective temperature. Finally, we numerically solve…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
