omegaLancer wrote:For what it's worth, ultra-accurate almighty google tells me that both white dwarves and neutron stars are composed of Fermi gases and the behaviour of Fermi gases and liquids is supposed to be very similar.
Wow Absolute astronomy.com said so, so it must be true
Then all those research papers on the behavior of Fermi gas and Fermi liquid must be mistaken.
Well i said i wasn't sure it was completely accurate. What implies that all those papers must be mistaken?
While Descripting the behavior of neutron in a neutron star as a drop is simple description of a very complex state of matter the different between the behavior of electron gas form of degenerative matter and Neutron Degenerative matter is vastly different.
First the Electrons in White drawf are not attracted by the nuclear strong force, while the neutrons in neutrons star are. The Pressure of the electron gas is alot weaker than that generated by neutrons.
Yeah, so what? I was just pointing out your misuse of the term 'degenerate matter' to mean only that in white dwarfs:
omegaLancer wrote:Actually you thinking of degenerative matter, as in White dwarves. Degenerative matter is a gas, Neutronium ( or the stuff we find in neutron stars ) is consider a super liquid due to its higher density and properties.
I admit i don't fully understand why, but dineutrons, trineutrons and tetraneutrons are all supposed to be impossible under current mainstream models due to the crappiness of neutron-neutron forces, so why should a gazillianeutron bound system work?
I don't know if a gas-like material can exhibit superfluidity, but the fact it's 'super
fluid' and not 'super
liquid' could mean it's not restricted to liquids.
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I've just been googling for papers and
this one came up, where it mentions:
The inner crust for 4×1011 g/cm3 < < 2×1014 g/cm3 consists of a lattice of neutron-rich nuclei together with a superfluid neutron gas and an electron gas.
(so it seems gases can be superfluid too)
but also says:
• The neutron liquid for 2 × 1014 g/cm3 < < 8 × 1014 g/cm3 contains mainly superfluid neutrons with a smaller concentration of superfluid protons and ‘normal’ electrons.
• The core region for > 8 × 1014 g/cm3 may or may not exist in some neutron stars, and will depend on whether or not kaon condensation or pion condensation occurs, or whether there is a transition to a neutron solid or quark matter or some other phase of hyperons physically distinct from a neutron liquid in the core.
(bolded mine- i didn't realise a neutron solid was possible)
It then goes on to model a neutron star as an ideal Fermi gas of noninteracting neutrons. So it looks like both sides are partially right.