How can a neutronstar that only consists of neutrons

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Neutron stars generate magnetic fields and can become pulsars despite being composed entirely of neutrons. This occurs because the original magnetic field of the parent star gets trapped and concentrated during the collapse, aligning the magnetic dipole moments of the neutrons. Neutrons possess a magnetic moment due to their quark composition, allowing them to act like a dipole. There is a possibility of a constant conversion between neutrons and protons within the star, which could influence the magnetic field dynamics. Overall, the strong nuclear force stabilizes the neutrons, enabling the formation of powerful magnetic fields in neutron stars.
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Hi! Long time reader first time writer here.
Just wondering, how can a neutronstar that only consists of neutrons be abel to generate an magnetic field and become an pulsar?
If I hasn´t got it wrong a pulsar can work in different ways either its momenthum can be resposable for the light emitting or the star is an dipol and sends electrical chargde particles. How can a NEUTRONstar be an dipol?
Thanx for every coming answer.
 
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A pulsar traps the magnetic field of its parent star as it collapses. All stars have some sort of magnetic field and if they collapse into a neutron star that field gets trapped and concentrated and the neutron star becomes essentially a massive and very powerful magnet. The neutrons have a magnetic dipole moment and in the process of collapse the stars original magnetic field aligns the dipole moments in the neutrons.
 
Kurdt said:
A pulsar traps the magnetic field of its parent star as it collapses. All stars have some sort of magnetic field and if they collapse into a neutron star that field gets trapped and concentrated and the neutron star becomes essentially a massive and very powerful magnet. The neutrons have a magnetic dipole moment and in the process of collapse the stars original magnetic field aligns the dipole moments in the neutrons.
:cool: I have also heard the neutrons will change to protons and back again, but I have not seen this clairified.

The brightest flash ever observed, ignoring the sun, is from a magnetar, neutron star sgr1806, back in December of 2005. This was not in the visible range, however.
 
A neutron free of the strong nuclear force naturally decays into a proton as a neutron is an unstable particle and a proton is as far as we know a stable particle. When a neutrondecays it does so by Beta decay which means it turns into a proton and also and electron and antineutrino. The everse process is also possible where a proton captures an electron and turns into a neutron and a neutrino.

A neutron star is composed entirely of neutrons because the star it was formed from had a gravitational field so strong it forced the electrons into the nucleus of the atoms of material and turned all the protons into neutrons.
 
Does this mean there is a constant process of neutron to proton to neutron occurring in a neutron star? If so, would that help explain the magnetic field, too?
 
Hymne said:
can a NEUTRONstar be an dipol?

Well a neutron is well known to have a magnetic moment, in spite of having no (net) charge. This is now explained by its composition of charged quarks.
 
GeorgeSol said:
Does this mean there is a constant process of neutron to proton to neutron occurring in a neutron star? If so, would that help explain the magnetic field, too?
Neutrons in a neutron star are bound by the strong nuclear force and are thus stable. The magnetic field is explained due to the fact that neutrons have a magnetic dipole moment as SelfAdjoint describes as being explained by a neutron's composition of charged quarks.
 
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