Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/5793
Title: Can superfluid stars be mistaken for black holes in astronomical observations?
Authors: Zloshchastiev, Konstantin G. 
Keywords: Relativistic astrophysics;Compact stars
Issue Date: 2024
Publisher: Sissa Medialab
Source: Zloshchastiev, K.G. 2024. Can superfluid stars be mistaken for black holes in astronomical observations? Proceedings of High Energy Astrophysics in Southern Africa 2023 (HEASA2023), 459: 1-5. doi:10.22323/1.459.0022
Journal: Proceedings of High Energy Astrophysics in Southern Africa 2023 (HEASA2023); Vol. 459 
Abstract: 
We consider a general relativistic model of a self-interacting complex scalar field with logarithmic nonlinearity motivated by studies of laboratory superfluids and Bose-Einstein condensates. Spherically-symmetric gravitational equilibria are shown in this model, which do not have event horizons but which are regular, singularity-free and asymptotically flat. They can be thus interpreted as compact stars whose stability against gravitational collapse is enhanced not only by the Heisenberg uncertainty principle but also by the property of superfluidity itself, their ``darkness'' comes naturally as a result of suppressed dissipative excitations. Such objects do not obey any absolute upper mass limit of a Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff type, while their relativisticity and effective compactness values are comparable to those of black holes. Their spatial density distribution drops abruptly (at the Gaussian-like rate), which can be mistaken in realistic astronomical observations for the presence of an exact material surface. We therefore present logarithmic superfluid stars as dark compact objects and black hole mimickers.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/5793
ISSN: 1824-8039
DOI: 10.22323/1.459.0022
Appears in Collections:Research Publications (Systems Science)

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