Credit: ICE-CSIC/D. Futselaar/Marino et al.

ESA's XMM-Newton and NASA's Chandra spacecraft have detected three young neutron stars that are unusually cold for their age. By comparing their properties to different neutron star models, scientists conclude that the oddballs' low temperatures disqualify around 75% of known models. This is a big step towards uncovering the one neutron star "equation of state" that rules them all, with important implications for the fundamental laws of the universe.

The paper is published in the journal Nature Astronomy.

Matter squeezed to the extreme

After stellar mass black holes, are the densest objects in the universe. Each neutron star is the compressed core of a giant star, left behind after the star exploded in a supernova. After running out of fuel, the star's core implodes under the force of gravity while its outer layers are blasted outward into space.

Matter in the center of a neutron star is squeezed so hard that scientists still don't know what form it takes. Neutron stars get their name from the fact that under this immense pressure, even atoms collapse: electrons merge with atomic cores, turning protons into neutrons. But it might get even weirder, as the extreme heat and pressure may stabilize more exotic particles that don't survive anywhere else, or possibly melt particles together into a swirling soup of their constituent quarks.

What happens inside a neutron star is described by the so-called " of state," a theoretical model that describes what can occur inside a neutron star. The problem is, scientists don't yet know which of the hundreds of possible equation of state models is correct. While the behavior of individual neutron stars may depend on properties like their mass or how fast they spin, all neutron stars must obey the same equation of state.

Credit: Chandra X-Ray Observatory

Too cold

Digging into data from ESA's XMM-Newton and NASA's Chandra missions, scientists discovered three exceptionally young and cold neutron stars that are 10–100 times colder than their peers of the same age. By comparing their properties to the cooling rates predicted by different models, the researchers conclude that the existence of these three oddballs rules out most proposed equations of state.

"The young age and the cold surface temperature of these three neutron stars can only be explained by invoking a fast cooling mechanism. Since enhanced cooling can be activated only by certain equations of state, this allows us to exclude a significant portion of the possible models," explains astrophysicist Nanda Rea, whose research group at the Institute of Space Sciences (ICE-CSIC) and Institute of Space Studies of Catalonia (IEEC) led the investigation.

Uncovering the true neutron star equation of state also has important implications for the fundamental laws of the universe. Physicists famously don't yet know how to stitch together the theory of general relativity (which describes the effects of gravity over large scales) with quantum mechanics (which describes what happens at the level of particles). Neutron stars are the best testing ground for this as they have densities and gravitation far beyond anything we can create on Earth.

Lessons from three oddball neutron stars. Credit: European Space Agency

Joining forces: Four steps to discovery

The three oddball neutron stars being so cold makes them too dim for most X-ray observatories to see. "The superb sensitivity of XMM-Newton and Chandra made it possible not only to detect these neutron stars, but to collect enough light to determine their temperatures and other properties," says Camille Diez, ESA research fellow who works on XMM-Newton data.

However, the were only the first step towards being able to draw conclusions about what these oddballs mean for the neutron star equation of state. To this end, Nanda's research team at ICE-CSIC combined the complementary expertise of Alessio Marino, Clara Dehman and Konstantinos Kovlakas.

More information: A. Marino et al, Constraints on the dense matter equation of state from young and cold isolated neutron stars, Nature Astronomy (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41550-024-02291-y

Journal information: Nature Astronomy