Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Group photograph
- List of participants
- Preface
- Reviews
- 1 Equations of state in stellar structure and evolution
- 2 Equation of state of stellar plasmas
- 3 Statistical mechanics of quantum plasmas. Path integral formalism
- 4 Onsager-molecule approach to screening potentials in strongly coupled plasmas
- 5 Astrophysical consequences of the screening of nuclear reactions
- 6 Crystallization of dense binary ionic mixtures. Application to white dwarf cooling theory
- 7 Non crystallized regions of White dwarfs. Thermodynamics. Opacity. Turbulent convection
- 8 White dwarf crystallization
- 9 Gravitational collapse versus thermonuclear explosion of degenerate stellar cores
- 10 Neutron star crusts with magnetic fields
- 11 High pressure experiments for astrophysics
- 12 Equation of state of dense hydrogen and the plasma phase transition; A microscopic calculational model for complex fluids
- 13 The equation of state of fluid hydrogen at high density
- 14 A comparative study of hydrogen equations of state
- 15 Strongly coupled ionic mixtures and the H/He equation of state
- 16 White dwarf seismology: Influence of the constitutive physics on the period spectra
- 17 Helioseismology: the Sun as a strongly-constrained, weakly-coupled plasma
- 18 Transport processes in dense stellar plasmas
- 19 Cataclysmic variables: structure and evolution
- 20 Giant planet, brown dwarf, and low-mass star interiors
- 21 Searches for brown dwarfs
- 22 Jovian seismology
- Observational projects
- Posters
20 - Giant planet, brown dwarf, and low-mass star interiors
from Reviews
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Group photograph
- List of participants
- Preface
- Reviews
- 1 Equations of state in stellar structure and evolution
- 2 Equation of state of stellar plasmas
- 3 Statistical mechanics of quantum plasmas. Path integral formalism
- 4 Onsager-molecule approach to screening potentials in strongly coupled plasmas
- 5 Astrophysical consequences of the screening of nuclear reactions
- 6 Crystallization of dense binary ionic mixtures. Application to white dwarf cooling theory
- 7 Non crystallized regions of White dwarfs. Thermodynamics. Opacity. Turbulent convection
- 8 White dwarf crystallization
- 9 Gravitational collapse versus thermonuclear explosion of degenerate stellar cores
- 10 Neutron star crusts with magnetic fields
- 11 High pressure experiments for astrophysics
- 12 Equation of state of dense hydrogen and the plasma phase transition; A microscopic calculational model for complex fluids
- 13 The equation of state of fluid hydrogen at high density
- 14 A comparative study of hydrogen equations of state
- 15 Strongly coupled ionic mixtures and the H/He equation of state
- 16 White dwarf seismology: Influence of the constitutive physics on the period spectra
- 17 Helioseismology: the Sun as a strongly-constrained, weakly-coupled plasma
- 18 Transport processes in dense stellar plasmas
- 19 Cataclysmic variables: structure and evolution
- 20 Giant planet, brown dwarf, and low-mass star interiors
- 21 Searches for brown dwarfs
- 22 Jovian seismology
- Observational projects
- Posters
Summary
Abstract
Astrophysical objects of low mass, ranging from giant planets to extreme dwarf main-sequence stars, have a number of physical characteristics in common due to properties of their equations of state. Their luminosities are low (much less than the solar luminosity L⊙) and their evolutionary timescales are typically measured in Gyr. So far there are few observational examples of these objects, although they are undoubtedly numerous in the galaxy. The lower mass limit is set by the object's ability to retain hydrogen during accumulation (about the mass of Saturn), while the upper mass limit is set by the lifting of electron degeneracy by high internal temperature. Objects confined within this broad range, which extends up to about 0.1 M⊙, are governed by the thermodynamics of liquid metallic hydrogen. In this paper, we discuss the implications of this feature of their interior structure for their radii, interior temperatures, thermonuclear energy generation rates, and luminosities. We conclude with a brief assessment of the confrontation between observations and theory in galactic clusters and in the solar system.
L'équation d'état des corps célestes de faible masse, qui vont des planètes géantes aux étoiles naines qui sont à la limite de la séquence principle, est a l'origine d'un ensemble commun de propriétés physiques. Leur Iuminosité est de beaucoup inférieure à celle du Soleil et leur temps caractéristique d'évolution se mesure en milliards d'années.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Equation of State in AstrophysicsIAU Colloquium 147, pp. 443 - 462Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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