论文标题
雪人质量2021宇宙边界白皮书:状态和QCD相变的密集物质方程
Snowmass 2021 Cosmic Frontier White Paper: The Dense Matter Equation of State and QCD Phase Transitions
论文作者
论文摘要
我们对在超高密度,高质子/中子数不对称和低温下物质物理特性的理解有限,目前是物理学中的主要杰出问题之一。 As matter in this extreme state is known to only exist stably in the cores of neutron stars (NSs), complementary measurements from electromagnetic and gravitational wave astrophysical observations of NSs, combined with terrestrial laboratory constraints and further theoretical investigations, hold the promise to provide important insight into the properties of matter in a region of the quantum chromodynamics phase space that is otherwise inaccessible.这项多学科的努力在接下来的十年及以后施加了以下对设施和资源的要求: *下一代重力波检测器,以发现更多的双ns和中子星黑孔合并; *敏感的射电望远镜找到最大,最快的旋转NS; *大区域,高时间分辨率和/或高角度分辨率X射线望远镜,以限制NS Mass-Radius关系; *核物理实验的合适实验室设施限制了状态的密集物质方程; *在此制度中为物质的理论研究提供资金; *现代大型高性能计算基础架构的可用性。 相同的设施和资源还将在现代物理学的其他备受瞩目的探究领域中取得重大进步,例如暗物质的本质,重力的替代理论,核仁超流体和超导性,以及一系列天体物理学,包括但不限于但不限于恒星进化,核合成的,核合成的黑元和原始黑色。
Our limited understanding of the physical properties of matter at ultra-high density, high proton/neutron number asymmetry, and low temperature is presently one of the major outstanding problems in physics. As matter in this extreme state is known to only exist stably in the cores of neutron stars (NSs), complementary measurements from electromagnetic and gravitational wave astrophysical observations of NSs, combined with terrestrial laboratory constraints and further theoretical investigations, hold the promise to provide important insight into the properties of matter in a region of the quantum chromodynamics phase space that is otherwise inaccessible. This multidisciplinary endeavor imposes the following requirements for facilities and resources in the upcoming decade and beyond: * A next generation of gravitational wave detectors to uncover more double NS and neutron star-black hole mergers; * Sensitive radio telescopes to find the most massive and fastest spinning NSs; * Large-area, high-time-resolution and/or high angular resolution X-ray telescopes to constrain the NS mass-radius relation; * Suitable laboratory facilities for nuclear physics experiments to constrain the dense matter equation of state; * Funding resources for theoretical studies of matter in this regime; * The availability of modern large-scale high performance computing infrastructure. The same facilities and resources would also enable significant advances in other high-profile fields of inquiry in modern physics such as the nature of dark matter, alternative theories of gravity, nucleon superfluidity and superconductivity, as well as an array of astrophysics, including but not limited to stellar evolution, nucleosynthesis, and primordial black holes.