Do Neutron Stars Shine In Dark Matter?
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Top Comments (10)
It's like I'm sitting at the front of the classroom
8:40 that simulation is WILD π€©
Just read a book on neutron star coalescence and how they are the factory of a large portion of the heavy elements found in the universe through nucleosythesis. Such an interesting read !
"may last millions of years, or may last only a fraction of a second" I love that sentence, and I really hope we develop experiments to narrow that down a bit.
Hey Space Timers. One minor correction: the paper referenced 10:19 is actually the following: https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.111004
Those helical fields look pretty cool
A huge thank you to you Matt and to the whole Space Time team for making appreciation of reality (with sources) so accessible to us lay persons. Much appriciated! Another well made vid. cheers! :)
If the axion cloud collapse is the source of FRB's, wouldn't that imply that FRB's are omnidirectional? If so, there should be cases where we might be able to detect reflections. The time between the initial FRB and reflections might be long, but information about the universe that could be extracted by analyzing them could be game-changing.
9:46 i like these subtitles, because sometimes I forget what was just said or exactly what was meant by it and now I can see it right there. very nice
Robert Klauber's "Student Friendly Quantum Field Theory, Vol 2" has a great discussion of axions and CP violation. He's written the most understandable textbooks on QFT that I've found.
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Top Comments (10)
It's like I'm sitting at the front of the classroom
8:40 that simulation is WILD π€©
Just read a book on neutron star coalescence and how they are the factory of a large portion of the heavy elements found in the universe through nucleosythesis. Such an interesting read !
"may last millions of years, or may last only a fraction of a second" I love that sentence, and I really hope we develop experiments to narrow that down a bit.
Hey Space Timers. One minor correction: the paper referenced 10:19 is actually the following: https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.111004
Those helical fields look pretty cool
A huge thank you to you Matt and to the whole Space Time team for making appreciation of reality (with sources) so accessible to us lay persons. Much appriciated! Another well made vid. cheers! :)
If the axion cloud collapse is the source of FRB's, wouldn't that imply that FRB's are omnidirectional? If so, there should be cases where we might be able to detect reflections. The time between the initial FRB and reflections might be long, but information about the universe that could be extracted by analyzing them could be game-changing.
9:46 i like these subtitles, because sometimes I forget what was just said or exactly what was meant by it and now I can see it right there. very nice
Robert Klauber's "Student Friendly Quantum Field Theory, Vol 2" has a great discussion of axions and CP violation. He's written the most understandable textbooks on QFT that I've found.