STRANGE MATTER LUMPS IN THE EARLY UNIVERSE

CHO, SJ and LEE, KS and HEINZ, U (1994) STRANGE MATTER LUMPS IN THE EARLY UNIVERSE. PHYSICAL REVIEW D, 50 (8). pp. 4771-4780. ISSN 0556-2821,

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Abstract

We study the stability of hot strange matter lumps formed in the early Universe. As the Universe cools below the hadronization temperature, these lumps normally become unstable against boiling. They can stabilize themselves against this process if their mass is sufficiently large to hold a hadronic crust by gravitational attraction. Our analysis improves on previous studies of the internal structure of such stable hot quark matter lumps with hadronic crust by correctly treating the constraints from chemical equilibrium of baryonic and electric charge between crust and core. Since the expansion rate of the early Universe is much faster than the cooling rate of the strange matter lumps, their internal structure is characterized by constant entropy per baryon. Our improved analysis confirms the earlier finding that such stable quark matter lumps require a mass well above the total mass inside the horizon.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: HEAVY-ION COLLISIONS; QUARK-GLUON-PLASMA; NEUTRON-STARS; PHASE-TRANSITION; EVAPORATION; SEPARATION; DROPLETS; EQUATION; STATE;
Depositing User: Dr. Gernot Deinzer
Last Modified: 19 Oct 2022 08:39
URI: https://pred.uni-regensburg.de/id/eprint/53031

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