Nonlinear excitations beyond the mean-field in dipolar Bose-Einstein condensates
Electromagnetic two-body problem and nonlinear dynamics of oscillator chains
Magnetars and the highly magnetized, fast, very massive, strange white dwarfs puls...
Full text | |
Author(s): |
Total Authors: 2
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Affiliation: | [1] Secretaria Educ, Sao Jose Dos Campos, SP - Brazil
[2] Fed Univ Sao Paulo UNIFESP, Dept Phys, Diadema, SP - Brazil
Total Affiliations: 2
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Document type: | Journal article |
Source: | ASTRONOMISCHE NACHRICHTEN; v. 342, n. 1-2, SI, p. 255-258, JAN 2021. |
Web of Science Citations: | 1 |
Abstract | |
Pulsars emit pulsed radiation at well-defined frequencies. In the canonical model, a pulsar is assumed to be a rotating, highly magnetized sphere made mostly of neutrons that has a magnetic dipole misaligned with respect to its rotation axis, which would be responsible for the emission of the observed pulses. The measurement of the pulse frequency and its first two derivatives allows the calculation of the braking index, n. One limitation of the canonical model is that, for all pulsars, it yields n = 3, a result that does not correspond to observational values of n. In order to contribute to the solution of this problem, we proposed a model for pulsars' rotation frequency decay assuming that the star's total moment of inertia would vary with time due to mass motions inside the core. As a result, we found that the pulsar J1734-3333 has total angular momentum practically conserved, a phenomenon that we explain by relating the motion of neutron superfluid vortices in the core to torques associated with radiation emission. (AU) | |
FAPESP's process: | 13/26258-4 - Superdense matter in the universe |
Grantee: | Manuel Máximo Bastos Malheiro de Oliveira |
Support Opportunities: | Research Projects - Thematic Grants |