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To the Problem of Magnetic Fields and Spin Polarization of Nucleons in Astrophysics

To the Problem of Magnetic Fields and Spin Polarization of Nucleons in Astrophysics. A . I . Sery , Brest State A.S. Pushkin University (Brest, Belarus) XII Gomel School « Actual Problems of Microworld Physics » 01.08.2013. I. The object and subject of investigation.

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To the Problem of Magnetic Fields and Spin Polarization of Nucleons in Astrophysics

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  1. To the Problem of Magnetic Fields and Spin Polarization of Nucleons in Astrophysics A.I. Sery, Brest State A.S. Pushkin University (Brest, Belarus) XII Gomel School «Actual Problems of Microworld Physics» 01.08.2013

  2. I. The object and subject of investigation

  3. p- and np-gas in astrophysics

  4. np-mixture at SN-II (with short lifetime)(Bruenn, S.W. Recent 2D/3D Core-Collapse Supernovae Simulations Results Obtained with the CHIMERA Code / S.W. Bruenn et al. //physics.fau.edu)

  5. Possible states of H in WD and SN-II In spite of that, the models of degenerate ep- and enp-gases should be also considered as an approximation

  6. Spontaneous nucleonspinpolarization (leading to magnetization) can be based on nuclear pseudomagnetism, exchange and correlation corrections. What is important here: V.G. BaryshevskyandM.I. Podgoretzkypredictednuclearpseudomagnetism in 1964; After that V. G. Baryshevskyproposed the ideathatspin-polarized state of nucleon systemcanturn outenergeticallypreferrablein comparison with non-polarized one; Experiments in 1970s showed that nuclear pseudomagnetic field exceeds ordinary “polarizational” magnetic field by 2 orders; Is spontaneous spin polarization possible at SN II explosions? Terrestrial ferromagnetism is mainly due to exchange energy of electrons; at astrophysical densities it seems to be impossible; Is ferromagnetism possible for proton gas due to exchange energy of protons in astrophysics?

  7. Basic known explanations of MF of WD and SN-II. New questions for WD (DAP, DAH) and SN-II: • Is ferromagnetism of nucleons possible? • Can it be an additional explanation of magnetic fields?

  8. Some papers on MF of WD • 1. Angel, J.P.R. Magnetic White Dwarfs // J.P.R. Angel. // Ann. Rev. Astron. Astrophys. – 1978. – Vol. 16 – P. 487. • 2. Landstreet, J.D. The Magnetic Fields of Single White Dwarfs / J.D. Landstreet // White Dwarfs and Variable Degenerate Stars (IAU Colloq. No 53). Eds. H.M. Van Horn and V. Weidemann. – Rochester, New York: University of Rochester Press, 1979. • 3. Valyavin, G.G. Magnetic fields of white dwarfs // G.G. Valyavin, T.E. Burlakova, S.N. Fabrika and D.N. Monin // Astronomy Reports. – 2003. – Vol. 47, № 7 – P. 587–599. • 4. Jordan, S. The fraction of DA white dwarfs with kilo-Gauss magnetic fields. / S. Jordan, R. Aznar Cuadrado, R. Napiwotzki, H.M. Schmid, S.K. Solanki // arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0610875v2 – P. 1–10. • 5. Cumming, Andrew. Magnetic Field Evolution in Accreting White Dwarfs / Andrew Cumming // ASP Conference Series. – P. 1–13. • 6. Tout, Christopher A. The origin of the strongest magnetic fields in dwarfs. / Christopher A. Tout // Pramana – J. Phys. – July 2011. – Vol. 77, № 1. – P. 199–212. • 7. Liebert, James. The True Incidence of Magnetism Among Field White Dwarfs. / James Liebert, P. Bergeron and J.B. Holberg // arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0210319v2 – P. 1–16. • 8. Nordhaus, Jason. Formation of high-field magnetic white dwarfs from common envelopes. / Jason Nordhaus [et al.] // www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1015005108 – P. 1–6. • 9. Norton, A.J. The spin periods and magnetic moments of white dwarfs in magnetic cataclysmic variables / A.J. Norton, G.A. Wynn, and R.V. Somerscales // Astrophysical Journal. – 2004. – 614(1, Par). – P. 349–357.

  9. Some papers on MF of SN • 1. Steven A. Balbus and John F. Hawley.Instability, turbulence, and enhanced transport in accretion disks. Rev. Mod. Phys. 70, 1–53 (1998) • 2. Shizuka Akiyama and J. Craig Wheeler. The Nonmonotonic Dependence of Supernova and Compact Remnant Formation on Progenitor Rotation. The Astrophysical Journal, 629:414-421, 2005 August 10

  10. II. Methods and approximations

  11. Restrictions imposed on our model

  12. Metallization density (perhaps, overestimated)

  13. Dirac delta, or Fermi pseudopotential, is used for nuclear interaction (it is enough for densities considered here)

  14. Calculations for p- or np-Stoner criterion (1 non-degenerate or mixture of 2 degenerate Fermi-gases): special algorithm was developed on the basis of the algorithm for 1 degenerate Fermi-gas: • L.S. Levitov, A.V. Shitov. Green Functions. Tasks and solutions. Moscow,Fizmatlit, 2003 [in Russian].

  15. Stoner (ferromagnetism) criterion formulations

  16. III. Stoner criterion for degenerate np-mixture

  17. Energy density terms for degenerate np-gas

  18. Using the methods mentioned above, we obtain Stoner criterion (w<0) for degenerate np-gas

  19. What is possible in WDs (left) and at SN-II explosions (left and right); ferromagnetism is above the curves

  20. Corresponding FM densities (table)

  21. Magnetic fields of SN (though it’s better to consider non-degenerate np-system

  22. The main conclusions on Part III • Spontaneous spin polarization for degenerate np-Fermi-gas is, most likely, possible • It can occur right after a SN II explosion, though np-mixture in SN II is, most likely, non-degenerate • It could be also possible in WD under neutronization threshold if the medium in WD was not crystal • There is only 1 region or ferromagnetism on (np,nn)-diagram if only nuclear interaction is considered • There are 2 regions or ferromagnetism on (np,nn)-diagram if not only nuclear, but also Coulomb exchange interaction are considered • Coulomb correlation energy reduces the positive effect of Coulomb exchange energy, but net effect for ferromagnetism is still more favourable in comparison with the case when only nuclear energy is considered

  23. You can find the details of the calculations for part III in the article(http://www.brsu.by/science/vestnik-brgu)

  24. IV. Stoner criterion for non-degenerate hydrogen

  25. The condition of non-degeneration

  26. Chemical potential of ideal gas

  27. Energy density of hot ideal Fermi-gas

  28. Exchange (Coulomb) energy density

  29. Correlation (Coulomb) energy density (according to Vedenov and Larkin formula)

  30. Nuclear energy density

  31. After some rearrangements we obtain Stoner criterion (w<0) for non-degenerate hydrogen

  32. Magnetic fields of WD As for SN-II, it’s better to consider non-degenerate np-system because here B ~ 108 Gs is predicted for pure H in SN-II

  33. The main conclusions on Part IV Spontaneous spin polarization for hot proton gas in outer layers of WDs and SN II is possible The density region of ferromagnetism is smaller in comparison with degenerate hydrogen Magnetic fields of B~106-109 Gs probably cannotbe explained directly by proton spin polarization though such a polarization can form initial magnetic field B~104 Gs which can be amplified by other mechanisms The question of magnetization at SN-II explosions (in outer layers) should be considered for non-degenerate np-system because only B~108 Gs is predicted for pure hydrogen

  34. You can find the details of the calculations for part IV in the article(http://www.brsu.by/science/vestnik-brgu)

  35. Thank you for your attention !

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