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Dark matter capture in compact stars -stellar on dark matterin constraints neutron stars with exotic phases Motoi Tachibana (Saga Univ.) Oct. 20, 2014 @ QCS2014, KIAA, Beijin What/Why dark matter (DM) ? Undoubtedly exists, but properties unknown Proposed by Zwicky as missing mass (1934) Interacting with other particles very weakly What/Why neutron star (NS) ? Landau’s gigantic nucleus Proposed by Baade and Zwicky Good market selling ultimate environments as a remnant after supernova explosion (1934) R ~ 10km M ~ 1.4M SUN T < 10MeV B ~ 10 12-15 G P ~ 2 - 3ms Why the connection between DM and NS? Possibly constraining WIMP-DM properties via NS CDMSII, 1304.4279 1 s= nl l : mean -46 free path2 s NS »M5´10 cm n» Way(4 below limit! / 3)pthe R mCDMS N For a typical neutron star, 3 M » 1.4M SUN , R » 10km Impacts of dark matter on NS • NS mass-radius relation with dark matter EOS • NS heating via dark matter annihilation • NS seismology : • Dark matter capture in NS and formation of black-hole to collapse host neutron stars cf) This is not so a new idea. People have considered the DM capture by Sun and the Earth since 80’s. cosmion W. Press and D. Spergel (1984) Cooling curves of Neutron Star T C. Kouvaris (‘10) t DM capture in NS *based on paper by McDermott-Yu-Zurek (2012) * (1) Accretion of DM dN c dt = CB ( N c ) CB : DM capture rate (1) Thermalization of DM (energy loss) dE = -x nBs N c vd E s N c : DM - nucleon cross section dt (2) BH formation and destruction of host NS N c mc 4p rth3 / 4 ³ r B rth : thermal radius condition of self-gravitation Capturable number of DMs in NS dN c dt = Cc N + Ccc N c - Cc a N c Capture rate due to DM-neutron scattering Self-capture rate due to DM-DM scattering DM self-annihilation rate 2 (A) Ccc = 0(no self-capture) Nc = Cc N Cc a tanh ( Reaches the steady state value within time t ~ 1/ Cc N C. c a C c N Cc a t ) N c¥ = Cc N ,/ Cc a (B) Cc a = 0(no self-annihilation) Nc = Cc N Ccc Linearly grows until éëexp(Ccc t) -1ùû t -1 ~ C, ccand then exponentially grows until the geometric limit is reached. (C) Ccc = Cc a = (no 0 self-capture/annihilation) N c = Cc N t Just linearly grows and CcisN the growth rate. Realized when DM carries a conserved charge, analogous to baryon number? Below we consider the case (C) DM capture rate The accretion rate (A. Gould, 1987) C c N = 4p ò r Rn 0 2 dCc N (r) dV dr neutron-DM elastic cross section -B 2 ù é dCc N (r) 6 v(r) 1- e = nc (r)nB (r)x 2 (v s N c )ê1ú 2 dV p v B úû êë 2 nc (r) : DM density nB (r) : baryon density v = 220 km s : DM velocity v(r) : escape velocity 2 mc m c mB 3 v(r) 4m 2 B = , m= , mr = 2 2 2 v (m -1) mB m c + mB Capture efficiency factor ξ In NS, neutrons are highly degenerated (i) If momentum transfer δp is less than p ,Fonly neutrons with momentum larger than p F-δp can participate in pF (ii) If not, all neutrons can join dp éd p x = Min ê , ë pF ù 1ú û Thermalization of DM After the capture, DMs lose energy via scattering with neutrons and eventually get thermalized DM mass ≦ 1GeV, æ 2.1´10-45 cm2 öæ 0.1GeV öæ 105 K ö ÷÷çç ÷÷ç tth » 7.7´10-5 yrs çç ÷ s Nc è ø è mc øè T ø DM mass ≧ 1GeV, æ 2.1´10-45 cm 2 öæ m ö2 æ 105 K ö c ÷÷ç tth » 0.054yrs çç ÷ ÷ç s Nc è øè100GeV ø è T ø Then, the DM gets self-gravitating once the total number of DM particles is larger than a critical one GN c mc 2 r > 4p G r B m c 3 r Þ 2 N self mc 4p r / 4 3 th = rB æ 100GeV ö æ T ö3/2 41 ÷÷ ç 5 ÷ @ 4.8 ´10 çç è mc ø è 10 K ø 5/2 Þ N self If this condition is met, for the wide range of the DM mass, gravitational collapse takes place, i.e., Nself exceeds the Chandrasekhar limit. Condition N c < Nself Observational constraints N c = Cc N t < N self For the case of the pulsar B1620-26: t = 2.82 ´10 years, T =10 K, r c =10 GeV / cm 8 McDermott-Yu-Zurek (2012) 6 3 3 Neutron star is Landau’s But… gigantic nucleus! So far people have been mainly studying the issue from particle physics side. However, hadrons in NS are in EXTREME, and exotic matter states could appear. (e.g.) neutron superfluidity meson condensation superconductivity of quarks What if those effects are incorporated? Possible effects M. Ruggieri and M.T. (2013) ① Modification of capture efficiency via energy gap (e.g.) color-flavor-locked (CFL) quark matter x = Minéëd p / ( pF - DCFL ), 1ùû sizable effect? ② Modification of low-energy effective theory (e.g.) neutron superfluidity dominant d.o.f. is a superfluid phonon. We are still struggling… Bertoni, Nelson and Reddy, Phys. Rev. D88 (2013) • Asymmetric (Ccc = Cca = 0) • Complex scalar • M_DM ~ 1 keV – 5 GeV • Couples to regular matter via heavy vector boson • Pauli blocking • Kinematic constraints • Superfluidity/Superconductivity Significantly affects thermalization time! Summary Stellar constraints on dark matter properties Dark matter capture in neutron stars --Accretion, thermalization and on-set of BH formation— Models for DM, but not considering NS seriously Proposal of medium effects for hadrons in NS --modified vacuum structures and collective modes-- Study of dark matter from neutron stars!