Explaining the thermal emission of old neutron stars with rotochemical heating and magnetized superconducting protons
Luis E. Rodr\'iguez, Andreas Reisenegger, Denis Gonz\'alez-Caniulef, Crist\'obal Petrovich

TL;DR
This study models how internal magnetic fields and proton/neutron energy gaps influence rotochemical heating in old neutron stars, explaining observed thermal emissions and suggesting large proton gaps with weak magnetic fields.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive simulation of magnetic field effects on rotochemical heating in superconducting neutron star interiors, matching observational data.
Findings
Large proton energy gaps (~1.5 MeV) are consistent with observations.
Small or vanishing neutron gaps fit the thermal emission data.
Millisecond pulsars likely have very weak internal magnetic fields.
Abstract
The detection of likely thermal ultraviolet emission from a few old neutron stars suggests that at least one internal heating mechanism is present in these stars. One proposed mechanism is rotochemical heating, in which the continuous contraction of the neutron star due to its spin-down produces chemical imbalances that induce Urca reactions, and the latter deposit heat in the neutron star core. If the protons in the star are superconducting, their energy gap suppresses the reactions, except in microscopic magnetized regions (such as quantized flux tubes) in which the protons act as if they were normal. Therefore, the strength of the internal magnetic field controls the rate at which reactions proceed and thus affects the thermal evolution of the neutron star. Here, we present the first comprehensive study of the effect of an internal magnetic field in the superconducting interior on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Scientific Research and Discoveries
