Finite Temperature Asymmetric Nuclear Matter Using Pion Dressing

Abstract

We study the asymmetric nuclear matter in a nonperturvative manner at finite temperatures using thermofield dynamics method. The nucleon-meson interaction is taken to examine the binding energy (EB), pressure (P) for various proton fractions.

Share and Cite:

Sahu, S. (2015) Finite Temperature Asymmetric Nuclear Matter Using Pion Dressing. Journal of Applied Mathematics and Physics, 3, 1308-1315. doi: 10.4236/jamp.2015.310159.

1. Introduction

The properties of hot dense nuclear matter are very important in the context of neutron stars [1] as well as in high-energy heavy-ion collisions experiments. In those experiments, nuclei undergo collisions [2] and produce states of nuclear matter at different temperatures at conditions far from those normally encountered in low energy collisions. At low temperatures, this can be attained in medium energy heavy-ion reactions; no such exotic state can be produced but there is the possibility of interesting liquid-gas phase transitions leading to the breakup of heated nuclei into small clusters or droplets of nucleons [3] .

Such phase transitions have been identified in multifragmentation experiments and in the crusts of neutron stars [4] [5] . The possibilities of such phase transitions were previously considered by several authors using different approaches [6] - [8] . Walecka [9] in a attempt, developed a method consisting of interactions of nucleons with a neutral scalar field σ and ρ mesons as well as neutral vector meson ω. Variations of the same model have also been considered including cubic and quartic terms in the σ fields to reproduce correct bulk modulus of nuclear matter [10] . These calculations however use meson fields as classical, and use a σ-field which is not observed.

A model for infinite nuclear matter consisting of interacting nucleons and pions was considered in [11] . The Pion Nucleon interaction was taken with off mass shell of pion. The scalar isoscalar pion condensates simulated the effects of σ mesons [12] with the short distance repulsion arising from composite structure of nucleons and/or through vector meson exchanges. This appeals aesthetically as classical σ fields arise from quantum mechanical structures and also has a stronger phenomenological appeal as σ mesons have not been found in nature. With a similar approach we shall reconsider nuclear matter at finite temperatures with pion dressing [13] with off mass shell. The methods of thermofield dynamics [14] fit naturally for this purpose because here statistical average is done through an expectation value over a “thermal vacuum” [11] in an extended Hilbert space.

The article is organised as follows. In Section 2, we review the thermofield dynamics to consider hot and dense nuclear matter and obtain expressions for temperature-dependant pressure P, binding energy B and nuclear density ρ. In Section 3, we evaluate numerically the above applying variational technique, study their characteristics and discuss the results so obtained.

2. Formalism

We consider the effective Hamiltonian for pion nucleon interaction at zero temperature [15] -[17] as

(1)

where, and are the Hamiltonians for the free nucleon part, the pion-interaction part and the free meson part respectively. Here is given by

(2)

and the effective Hamiltonian for pion nucleon interaction

(3)

We have taken, with M as the mass of the nucleon. The free meson part of the Hamiltonian is given by

(4)

where denotes the mass of the meson and. The pion field expansion in Equation (4) in terms of annihilation and creation operators is given by

(5)

with. We now study asymmetric nuclear matter at finite temperature using thermofield dynamics method. Here the thermal average of a quantum operator given in [13] [14] with, as

(6)

The above reduces to ground state expectation, in zero temperature limit value for the operator, shown below as

(7)

where is the lowest energy state. In thermofield method, one generalises [13] to the case of finite temperature and for some, the relationship holds

(8)

where is defined as the “thermal vacuum”. Here corresponding to physical operator a, a “tilde” operator is introduced to denote thermal modes. At finite temperature the ground state is replaced by given as [13]

(9)

where in the above corresponds to the extra Hilbert space. The function is calculated through minimization of thermodynamic potential density given as

(10)

where, the chemical potential, N, number of nucleons and the entropy density

For zero chemical potential and for free fields, extremization of the free energy then yields

(11)

with Hamiltonian density as so that

If we substitute this value the free energy density becomes

Similarly for the fermionic sector the thermal vacuum is

(12)

where corresponds to the creation of the fermionic thermal modes. The entropy is given as

and is given as [13]

(13)

where is the chemical potential corresponding to baryon number conservation and for free fermions of mass M. In this methodology the correct distribution function with extra thermal modes can be obtained and this enables us to have the temperature dependent background off-shell pion pair configuration given as

(14)

with

(15)

and

(16)

In the above,

(17)

In nucleon sector for fermions

(18)

with

(19)

where will be determined later. We then have the nuclear matter density

(20)

Here the thermodynamic potential [18] is given by

(21)

where and are chemical potentials of proton and neutron respectively, and are neutron and proton densities and S is the entropy of the asymmetric nuclear matter. Clearly, with , Equation (13) gives of zero temperature. for the interacting system will be determined here from the construction of the thermodynamic potential. We thus have for the nucleon kinetic term temperature dependent as

(22)

The temperature dependent kinetic energy due to the mesons is given by

(23)

where and is pion dressing function [13] which extremises energy, pressure and entropy etc of nuclear matter. Then the interaction energy density becomes

(24)

where

(25)

we shall now assume a phenomenological term corresponding to meson repulsion due to composite structure of mesons given as

(26)

Finally, the nucleon repulsion term given as

(27)

where is as given in Equation (20). Thus the energy density is given by

(28)

where

as before.

The thermodynamic potential density Ω is given by

(29)

where the last term corresponds to nucleon number conservation with and as the chemical potentials of proton and neutron respectively. The temperature dependent pressure is given as. The entropy density above is with being the entropy in fermion sector given as

and similarly the meson sector contribution is given as

Thus the thermodynamic potential density now is a functional of, as well as the pion dressing function which will of course depend upon temperature. Extremisation of Equation (29) with respect to yields

(30)

which is of the same form as [16] for zero temperature. Similarly minimising the thermodynamic potential with respect to we get

(31)

where

(32)

Once we substitute the optimised dressing as in Equation (30), the above simplifies to

(33)

which is different from due to interactions. Further, minimising the thermodynamic potential with respect to we have the solution

(34)

with

(35)

where J is given in Equation (25). We may note that the change in above from is also due to interaction.

3. Results and Discussions

The parameters a, , and [15] [16] are determined variationally. The first three of these four parameters are evaluated by constraining the binding energy per nucleon, the pressure P and the

compressibility K of the symmetric nuclear matter i.e., and [19] .

The fourth parameter of our calculation is evaluated by fixing the value of to the standard value of 31 MeV.

The pion-nucleon coupling constant and a = 115.264 MeV, , and.

In Figure 1 we study the nature of variation of EB with different baryon densities at different temperatures. The saturation binding energy increases from −16 MeV at zero temperature to higher values with rise of temperature. This clearly shows that the temperature has a significant effect on symmetric nuclear matter.

In Figure 2, the variation of pressure P with nucleon densities have been studied at different temperatures (T = 0, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20 MeV). It shows that at the saturation density, the pressure is zero for zero temperature as usual. But pressure becomes negative if one goes towards lower density and it becomes zero at zero nuclear density. This peculear behaviour is first order phase transition. This trend disappears at higher temperatures.

In Figure 3, the variation of pressure with nucleon densities for different Proton fraction at different temperatures. It shows that at Proton fraction the pressure becomes positive. If one goes to higher yPs the Pressuer becomes negative at different lower densities reaching zero Pressure at zero nucleon densities. So the

Figure 1. The binding energy EB as a function of nucleon density ρ.

Figure 2. The pressure P as a function of nucleon density ρ at different temperature.

asymmetric nuclear matter behaves differently at different nucleon densities.

In Figure 4, the slope at different relative nucleon densities are plotted at two different

temperatures for different proton fractions. It shows that the slope becomes negative as the relative nucleon densities increases to a certain value and then increases at higher values. The trend is same at different higher temperatures but terminates to a certain value of slope at certain lower densities.

4. Summary

In this paper, we study the warm equation of state (EOS) of asymmetric nuclear matter taking pion-nucleon interaction with repulsive effect due to ρ and ω mesons. We observe here that our results are comparable with the Non-Linear Walecka (NLWM) and Quark Meson Coupling (QMC) model [20] . The binding energy changes from negative to positive value with increase of temperature around saturation density. The profile of pressure variation with density at different temperatures shows that there is a liquid-gas phase transition and the transition

Figure 3. The pressure P as a function of nucleon density ρ for different proton fraction.

Figure 4. The pressure variation as a function of relative nucleon density for different proton fraction.

is continuous above the critical temperature Tc at which. We also observe that the pressure gradient becomes more negative due to increase of proton fraction leading to a possibility of instability.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

[1] Prakash, M., Bombaci, I., Prakash, M., Ellis, P.J., Lattimer, J.M. and Knorren, R. (1977) Composition and Structure of Protoneutron Stars. Physics Report, 280, 1-77.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0370-1573(96)00023-3
[2] Abreu, M.C., et al. (2000) Evidence for Deconfinement of Quarks and Gluons from the J/ψ Suppression Pattern Measured in Pb-Pb Collisions at the CERN-SPS. Physics Letters B, 477, 28-36.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0370-2693(00)00237-9
[3] Hauger, J.A., et al. (1996) Dynamics of the Multifragmentation of 1A GeV Gold on Carbon. Physical Review Letters, 77, 235.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.77.235
[4] Pethick, C.J., Ravenhall, D.G. and Lorenz, C.P. (1995) The Inner Boundary of a Neutron-Star Crust. Nuclear Physics A, 584, 675-703.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.77.235
[5] Lorenz, C.P., Ravenhall, D.G. and Pethick, C.J. (1993) Neutron Star Crusts. Physical Review Letters, 70, 379.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.70.379
[6] Barranco, M. and Buchler, J.R. (1980) Thermodynamic Properties of Hot Nucleonic Matter. Physical Review C, 22, 1729. http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.22.1729
[7] Müller, H. and Serot, B.D. (1995) Phase Transitions in Warm, Asymmetric Nuclear Matter. Physical Review C, 52, 2072.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.52.2072
[8] Menezes, D.P. and Providencia, C. (1999) Droplet Formation in Cold Asymmetric Nuclear Matter. Nuclear Physics A, 650, 283-198.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0375-9474(99)00109-8
Menezes, D.P. and Providencia, C. (1999) Nucleation Process in Asymmetric Hot Nuclear Matter. Physical Review C, 60, Article ID: 024313.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/physrevc.60.024313
[9] Walecka, J.D. (1974) A Theory of Highly Condensed Matter. Annals of Physics, 83, 491-529.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0003-4916(74)90208-5
Serot, B.D. and Walecka, J.D. (1986) Advances in Nuclear Physics, 16, 1.
Gmuca, S. (1991) Relativistic Mean-Field Fit to Microscopic Results in Nuclear Matter. Journal of Physics G, 17, 1115.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0954-3899/17/7/010
[10] Gambhir, Y.K. and Ring, P. (1988) Relativistic Description of Deformed Rare Earth Nuclei. Physics Letters B, 202, 5-9.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0370-2693(88)90843-X
[11] Mishra, A., Mishra, H. and Misra, S.P. (1990) Nuclear Matter with Constituent Meson Quanta. International Journal of Modern Physics A, 5, 3391-3399.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/S0217751X90001483
[12] Eisenberg, J.M. (1981) A Heuristic Model for Nucleon Effective Mass Features in the Presence of Pion Condensation. Physics Letters B, 104, 353-356.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0370-2693(81)90696-1
Jung, H., Beck, F. and Miller, G.A. (1989) Relativistic Pion-Ring Series for Nuclear Matter. Physical Review Letters, 62, 2357-2360.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.62.2357
[13] Mishra, H., Misra, S.P., Panda, P.K. and Parida, B.K. (1992) Hot Nuclear Matter: A Variational Approach. International Journal of Modern Physics E, 1, 405-419.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/S0218301392000229
[14] Umezawa, H., Matsumoto, H. and Tachiki, M. (1982) Thermo Field Dynamics and Condensed States. North Holand, Amsterdam.
[15] Sarangi, S., Panda, P.K., Sahu, S.K. and Maharana, L. (2008) Asymmetric Nuclear Matter: A Variational Approach. International Journal of Modern Physics B, 22, 4524-4537.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/S0217979208050279
[16] Sarangi, S., Panda, P.K., Sahu, S.K. and Maharana, L. (2010) Study of the Asymmetric Nuclear Matter with Pion Dressing. Indian Journal of Physics, 84, 431-447.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12648-010-0028-9
[17] Sahu, S.K. (2015) Low Density Instability in Asymmetric Nuclear Matter Using Pion Dressing. Journal of Modern Physics, 6, 1350-1359.
http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/jmp.2015.69140
[18] Fetter, A.L. and Walecka, J.D. (1971) Quantum Theory of Many Particle System. McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York, 34.
[19] Steiner, A.W., Prakash, M., Lattimer, J.M. and Ellis, P.J. (2005) Isospin Asymmetry in Nuclei and Neutron Stars. Physics Reports, 441, 325-375.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.physrep.2005.02.004
[20] Santos, A.M., Providecia, C. and Panda, P.K. (2009) Low Density Instabilities in Asymmetric Nuclear Matter within the Quark-Meson Coupling (QMC) Model with the δ Meson. Physical Review C, 79, Article ID: 045805.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.79.045805

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.