4.8 Review

Color superconductivity in dense quark matter

Journal

REVIEWS OF MODERN PHYSICS
Volume 80, Issue 4, Pages 1455-1515

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/RevModPhys.80.1455

Keywords

BCS theory; chiral symmetries; fermion systems; flavour model; ground states; neutron stars; nuclear superfluid model; quantum chromodynamics; quark matter; quarks; spontaneous symmetry breaking; stellar internal processes

Funding

  1. Offices of Nuclear Physics and High Energy Physics of the Office of Science of the U. S. Department of Energy [DE-FG02-91ER40628, DE-FG02-05ER41375, DE-FG02-94ER40818, DE-FG02-03ER41260.]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Matter at high density and low temperature is expected to be a color superconductor, which is a degenerate Fermi gas of quarks with a condensate of Cooper pairs near the Fermi surface that induces color Meissner effects. At the highest densities, where the QCD coupling is weak, rigorous calculations are possible, and the ground state is a particularly symmetric state, the color-flavor locked (CFL) phase. The CFL phase is a superfluid, an electromagnetic insulator, and breaks chiral symmetry. The effective theory of the low-energy excitations in the CFL phase is known and can be used, even at more moderate densities, to describe its physical properties. At lower densities the CFL phase may be disfavored by stresses that seek to separate the Fermi surfaces of the different flavors, and comparison with the competing alternative phases, which may break translation and/or rotation invariance, is done using phenomenological models. We review the calculations that underlie these results and then discuss transport properties of several color-superconducting phases and their consequences for signatures of color superconductivity in neutron stars.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available