Everything about Compact Object totally explained
In
astronomy, the term
compact star (sometimes
compact object) is used to refer collectively to
white dwarfs,
neutron stars, other
exotic dense stars, and
black holes. These objects are all small for their mass. The term
compact star is often used when the exact nature of the star isn't known, but evidence suggests that it's very
massive and has small
radius, thus implying one of the above-mentioned possibilities. A compact star which isn't a black hole may be called a
degenerate star.
Compact stars as the endpoint of stellar evolution
Compact stars form the endpoint of
stellar evolution. A star shines and thus loses energy. The loss from the radiating surface is compensated by the production of energy from
nuclear fusion in the interior of the star. When a star has exhausted all its energy and undergoes
stellar death, the gas pressure of the hot interior can no longer support the weight of the
star and the star collapses to a denser state: a compact star. The difference between a white dwarf or neutron star and an ordinary star is analogous to the difference between
solids and
gases. If you waited until a white dwarf or neutron star was sufficiently cold, and if you'd a rocket which could survive the enormous gravitational and
tidal forces, you could land on the surface of the star. Typical cooling times for white dwarfs, however, are much larger than the present age of the Universe.
Compact stars last forever
Although compact stars may radiate, and thus cool off and lose energy, they don't depend on high temperatures to maintain their pressure. Barring external perturbation or
baryon decay, that'll persist forever. Eventually, given enough time (when we enter the so-called
degenerate era of the universe)
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), all stars will have evolved into dark, compact stars.
A somewhat wider class of
compact objects is sometimes defined to contain, as well as compact stars, smaller solid objects such as
planets,
asteroids, and
comets. These compact objects are the only objects in the universe that could exist at low temperatures. There is a remarkable variety of stars and other clumps of matter, but all dense matter in the universe must eventually end in one of only five classes of compact objects.
Thought experiment in building compact objects
Suppose we do a
thought experiment and build a cold object by adding mass and ignoring thermal pressure. How will it stand the gravitational pull? In this experiment, we'll find the five possible types of object: planet-like, white dwarf, neutron star, exotic star, and black hole.
Planets
At low
density (planets and the like) the object is held up by
electromagnetic forces. These forces constrain
electrons to occupy
orbitals around nuclei, which give rise to
chemical bonds and thus allow stiff objects such as rocks to exist. These objects are so stiff that they don't compress very much when mass is added. Adding more (cold) mass therefore makes the object larger: radius increases with mass. This agrees with our intuitions.
Eventually a point is reached where the central pressure is so large that all matter is
ionized so that the electrons are stripped from the nuclei and move freely. No chemical bonds now exist to hold up the object. This point is reached at the center of the planet Jupiter. Add more mass to Jupiter and the increase of pressure is smaller than the increase of gravity, so the radius will decrease with increasing mass. The object will shrink.
The largest cold mass in the universe
A planet such as
Jupiter has about the largest volume possible for a cold mass. Add mass to Jupiter and the planet's volume, somewhat counter-intuitively, becomes smaller. The central density now is large enough that the free electrons become
degenerate. This term means that the electrons have fallen into the lowest-energy
states available. Since electrons are
fermions, they obey the
Pauli exclusion principle, and no two electrons can occupy the same state. The electrons thus occupy a wide band of low-energy states. Compressing the mass forces this band to widen, creating the
quantum-mechanical force of
electron degeneracy pressure which now holds the center of the planet apart. (The ions present contribute almost no force.)
White dwarfs
If we continue to add mass in our thought-experiment, we'll find that more and more of our object becomes degenerate. The stars called
degenerate dwarfs or, more usually,
white dwarfs are made up mainly of
degenerate matter—typically, carbon and oxygen nuclei in a sea of degenerate electrons. White dwarfs arise from the cores of
main-sequence stars and are therefore very hot when they're formed. As they cool that'll redden and dim until they eventually become dark
black dwarfs. White dwarfs were observed in the 19th century, but the extremely high densities and pressures they contain were not explained until the 1920s.
The
equation of state for degenerate matter is "soft", meaning that adding more mass will result in a smaller object. If in our thought experiment we keep adding mass to what is now a white dwarf, the object therefore shrinks and the central density becomes even larger, with higher degenerate-electron energies. The star's radius has now shrunk to only a few thousand
kilometers
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), and the mass is approaching the theoretical upper limit of the mass of a white dwarf, the
Chandrasekhar limit, about 1.4 times the mass of the Sun.
If we were to take matter from the center of our white dwarf and slowly start to compress it, we'd first see electrons forced to combine with nuclei, changing their
protons to
neutrons by
inverse beta decay. The equilibrium would shift towards heavier, more neutron-rich nuclei which are not stable at everyday densities. As the density increases, these nuclei become still larger and less well-bound. At a critical density of about 4·10
14 kg/
m³, called the
neutron drip line, the atomic nucleus would tend to fall apart into protons and neutrons. Eventually we'd reach a point where the matter is on the order of the density (~2·10
17 kg/m³) of an atomic nucleus. At this point the matter is chiefly free neutrons, with a sprinkling of protons and electrons. Objects with these central densities will be formed if in our thought experiment we continue to add mass to a white dwarf until the Chandrasekhar limit is exceeded. They form our third class of compact objects.
Neutron stars
We have reached a point where nature takes over from our thought experiment, as addition of matter to a white dwarf actually happens in nature. In certain
binary stars containing a white dwarf, mass is transferred from the companion star onto the white dwarf, eventually pushing it over the Chandrasekhar limit. Electrons react with protons to form neutrons and thus no longer supply the necessary pressure to resist gravity. The star will collapse. If the center of the star is composed mostly of carbon and oxygen then such a
gravitational collapse will ignite runaway fusion of the carbon and oxygen, resulting in a
Type Ia supernova which entirely blows apart the star before the collapse can become irreversible. If the center is composed mostly of magnesium or heavier elements, the collapse continues.
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) As the density further increases, the remaining electrons react with the protons to form more neutrons. The collapse continues until (at higher density) the neutrons become degenerate. A new equilibrium is possible after the star shrinks by three
orders of magnitude, to a radius between 10 and 20 km. This is a
neutron star.
Although the first neutron star wasn't observed until 1967 when the first radio
pulsar was discovered, neutron stars were proposed by Baade and Zwicky in 1933, only one year after the neutron was discovered in 1932. They realized that because neutron stars are so dense, the collapse of an ordinary star to a neutron star would liberate a large amount of gravitational potential energy, providing a possible explanation for
supernovae.
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) This is the explanation for supernovae of types
Ib, Ic, and
II. Such supernovae occur when the iron core of a massive star exceeds the Chandrasekhar limit and collapses to a neutron star.
Like electrons, neutrons are fermions. They therefore provide
neutron degeneracy pressure to support a neutron star against collapse. In addition, repulsive neutron-neutron interactions provide additional pressure. Like the Chandrasekhar limit for white dwarfs, there's a limiting mass for neutron stars: the
Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff limit, where these forces are no longer sufficient to hold up the star. As the forces in dense hadronic matter are not well understood, this limit isn't known exactly but is thought to be between 2 and 3 times the mass of the Sun. If more mass accretes onto a neutron star, eventually this mass limit will be reached. What happens next isn't completely clear.
Exotic stars
Strange stars
It is possible that the
neutrons will decompose into their component
quarks. In this case, the
star will shrink further and become more dense, but it may survive in this new state indefinitely if no extra mass is added. It has become a very large
nucleon. A star in this hypothetical state is called a
quark star or
strange star. The pulsars
RX J1856.5-3754 and
3C58 have been suggested as possible quark stars.
Preon stars
If we go beyond the
standard model of particle physics and assume that
quarks and
leptons are not the fundamental
elementary particles but are themselves composed of
preons, then even denser objects,
preon stars, wouldn't be unthinkable. A star may collapse to one ten-thousandth of its size, bringing its radius to one metre or less. It would be a sort of giant quark whose density might exceed 10
23 kg/m³, and might even approach 10
33 kg/m³.
In general relativity, if the star collapses to a size smaller than its
event horizon, it'll become a black hole. For a one solar mass object, the event horizon has a radius of 3 km; so, to be consistent with general relativity, any exotic Preon star state would have to have a radius larger than this size.
Q stars
Q-Stars are compact, heavier neutron stars with an exotic state of matter.
The stellar-mass objects we've seen so far (white dwarfs, neutron stars, and presumably the more exotic possibilities of quark and preon stars) have all been held up wholly or partially by degeneracy pressure. Collectively we may therefore call them
degenerate stars. We now come to a different possibility.
Black holes
As we add more mass, equilibrium against gravitational collapse reaches its breaking point. The star's pressure is insufficient to counterbalance gravity and a catastrophic gravitational collapse occurs in milliseconds. The
escape velocity at the surface, already at least 1/3 light speed, quickly reaches the velocity of light. No energy or matter can escape: a
black hole has been created. All light will be trapped within an
event horizon, and so a black hole appears truly
black, except for the possibility of
Hawking radiation. It is presumed that the collapse will continue. In the classical theory of
general relativity, a
gravitational singularity will be created occupying no more than a
point. There may be a new halt of the catastrophic gravitational collapse at a size comparable to the
Planck length, but at these lengths there's no known theory of gravity to predict what will happen.
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