Color superconductivity in dense quark matter
Washington University in St. Louis · Massachusetts Institute of Technology · +1 more institution
Abstract
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…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 68.09
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 449
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Physics
- Color superconductivity
- Strange matter
- Diquark
- Superfluidity
- Superconductivity
- Condensed matter physics
- Quantum chromodynamics
- Affordable and clean energy