Cooling of Neutron Stars and Urca-process

AI Thread Summary
The cooling of neutron stars cannot occur through the direct Urca process due to the Pauli exclusion principle, which prevents created particles from occupying already filled states. Instead, the modified Urca process introduces an additional neutron, allowing the reaction to proceed and enabling neutron stars to cool in accordance with thermodynamic laws. The discussion raises questions about the role of Cooper pairing and its potential impact on the cooling process, suggesting that it may lead to different statistical behaviors. Theoretical estimates indicate that a direct nucleon Urca process could result in rapid cooling with a temperature dependence of T5. Overall, the modified Urca process is considered a necessary mechanism for the cooling of neutron stars.
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Hi,

in a lecture I was told that the cooling of neutron stars cannot happen via the 'direct' Urca process (beta decay and inverse beta decay), because the created particles cannot go into occupied states (Pauli exclusion). The 'modified' Urca process was introduced, with an additional neutron catalysing the reaction. Now what is the crucial difference here, that makes the modified Urca process an allowed one as opposed to the direct Urca?

Thank you for your answers.
 
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That is a hot topic [pardon the pun] in theoretical physics. The direct urca process cannot work on a neutron star for reasons as stated. But, neutron stars must eventually cool to remain in conformance with the laws of thermodynamics. The modified urca process is an attempt to satisfy this demand. I don't particularly care for the additional neutron thing as a solution. Quark soup is a messy affair.
 
Okay, but why is the modified Urca allowed? Has it to do with cooper pairing leading to different statistics?
 
That is one possibility. See, for example:
Neutrino Emission from Cooper Pairs and Minimal Cooling of Neutron Stars
http://arxiv.org/abs/0906.1621
 
I think that arguments and estimates based on fundamental relations of many-body theory show that one realization of this phenomenon could produce very rapid cooling of the star via a direct nucleon Urca process displaying a T5 dependence on temperature.
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What we see appears to suggest neutron stars cool very near the low limit required by thermodynamics. I believe that rules out the URCA process. I am guessing here, as are most theorists.
 
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