Phys. Rev. D 72, 065021 (2005) [10 pages]Deconfinement and color superconductivity in cold neutron starsReceived 25 April 2005; published 30 September 2005 We study the deconfinement transition of hadronic matter into quark matter in neutron star conditions in the light of color superconductivity. Deconfinement is considered to be a first order phase transition that conserves color and flavor. It gives a short-lived (τ∼τweak) transitory colorless-quark-phase that is not in β-equilibrium. We deduce the equations governing deconfinement when quark pairing is allowed and find the regions of the parameter space (pairing gap Δ versus bag constant B) where deconfinement is possible inside cold neutron stars. We show that for a wide region of (B,Δ) a pairing pattern is reachable within a strong interaction timescale, and the resulting “2SC-like” phase is preferred energetically to the unpaired phase. We also show that although β-stable hybrid star configurations are known to be possible for a wide region of the (B,Δ)-space, many of these configurations could not form in practice because deconfinement is forbidden, i.e. the here studied non-β-stable intermediate state cannot be reached. © 2005 The American Physical Society URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.72.065021
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.72.065021
PACS:
25.75.Nq, 12.38.−t, 26.60.+c
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