What is the significance of the Chandrasekhar boundary in neutron star research?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the significance of the Chandrasekhar boundary in the context of neutron star research, exploring its implications for stellar evolution and the transition between different types of stellar remnants, particularly white dwarfs and neutron stars.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant inquires about the meaning of the Chandrasekhar boundary, indicating a need for clarification on the topic.
  • Another participant defines the Chandrasekhar limit as the maximum mass of a white dwarf, approximately 1.5 times the mass of the Sun, beyond which a star will collapse into a black hole, although they note that mass loss can occur before this collapse.
  • A further contribution specifies that the Chandrasekhar limit pertains to white dwarfs supported by electron degeneracy pressure, and mentions that a star exceeding this mass may collapse into a neutron star instead of a black hole.
  • Another participant highlights the uncertainty surrounding the upper mass limit for neutron stars, noting estimates between 2 to 3 solar masses and pointing out that no neutron stars have been observed exceeding approximately 1.4 solar masses.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the implications of the Chandrasekhar limit and the characteristics of neutron stars, indicating that the discussion remains unresolved regarding the exact mass limits and transitions between stellar types.

Contextual Notes

The discussion reflects limitations in current understanding of neutron star masses and the conditions under which stars transition from white dwarfs to neutron stars or black holes. There are also dependencies on definitions of mass limits and the nature of degeneracy pressure.

canopus
What does the Chandrasekhar boundary (or line, I'm not sure about it) means?
 
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(Chandrasekhar Limit.)

It's the limit of how massive a white dwarf star can be, and it's about 1 1/2 the mass of our Sun. Anything more massive than that will keep collapsing to form a Black Hole. This is not to say that a star twice as massive as the Sun will become a black hole, since it will blow off most of its mass before collapsing. But any star that still has more than Chandrasekhar Limit of its mass remaining when it collapses will just keep collapsing.
 
To be more specific, the Chandrasekhar limit is the mass of the largest possible white dwarf star, which is a particular type of star that is supported against gravitational collapse by electron degeneracy pressure. Electron degeneracy pressure is a sort of pressure due to the inability of electrons to occupy the same quantum states -- you may have heard of this as the "Pauli exclusion principle."

A white dwarf of more than the Chandrasekhar mass does not necessarily become a black hole -- it may collapse a bit further and become a neutron star, an even more peculiar object supported by a stronger form of degeneracy pressure due to neutrons.

- Warren
 
The upper mass limit for a neutron star is not very firm at this time. Estimates range anywhere from 2 to as much a 3 solar masses. I did some checking and was somewhat surprised to find it does not appear any neutron stars discovered to date have been measured to be much heavier than the lower limit of about 1.4 solar masses.
 

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