In astroparticle physics, an Urca process is a reaction which emits a neutrino and which is assumed to take part in cooling processes in neutron stars and white dwarfs. The process was first discussed by George Gamow and Mário Schenberg while they were visiting a casino named Cassino da Urca in Urca, Rio de Janeiro. As Gamow recounts in his autobiography, the name was chosen in part to commemorate the gambling establishment where the two physicists had first met, and "partially because the Urca Process results in a rapid disappearance of thermal energy from the interior of a star, similar to the rapid disappearance of money from the pockets of the gamblers on the Casino de Urca."[1] In Gamow's South Russian dialect, urca (Russian: урка) can also mean a robber or gangster.[2][3]

The direct Urca processes are the simplest neutrino-emitting processes and are thought to be central in the cooling of neutron stars. They have the general form

B
1
B
2
+

+
ν
l
,
B
2
+

B
1
+
ν
l
,

where B
1
and B
2
are baryons,

is a lepton, and
ν
l
(and
ν
l
) are (anti-)neutrinos. The baryons can be nucleons (free or bound), hyperons like
Λ
,
Σ
and
Ξ
, or members of the
Δ
isobar. The lepton is either an electron or a muon.

The Urca process is especially important in the cooling of white dwarfs, where a lepton (usually an electron) is absorbed by the nucleus of an ion and then convectively carried away from the core of a star. Then, a beta decay occurs. Convection then carries the element back into the interior of the star, and the cycle repeats many times. Because the neutrinos emitted during this process are unlikely to be reabsorbed, this is effectively a cooling mechanism for white dwarfs.[4]

The process can also be essential in the cooling of neutron stars. If a neutron star contains a central core in which the direct Urca-process is operative, the cooling timescale shortens by many orders of magnitude.[5]

References

  1. Gamow, George (1970). My World Line: An Informal Autobiography. New York: The Viking Press. p. 137.
  2. D. Darling. "Urca process". The Internet Encyclopedia of Science. Retrieved 2 March 2010.
  3. D. K. Nadyozhin (1995). "Gamow and the physics and evolution of stars". Space Science Reviews. 74 (3–4): 455–461. Bibcode:1995SSRv...74..455N. doi:10.1007/BF00751432. S2CID 122987210.
  4. M. Brueggen; A. Kercek (10 January 2000). "The convective URCA process in white dwarfs". Max Planck Institute. Archived from the original on 12 January 2010. Retrieved 5 February 2010.
  5. P. Haensel (1995). "Urca processes in dense matter and neutron star cooling". Space Science Reviews. 74 (3–4): 427–436. Bibcode:1995SSRv...74..427H. doi:10.1007/BF00751429. S2CID 115313950.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.