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Degenerate matter : ウィキペディア英語版
Degenerate matter

Degenerate matter〔
〕〔An Introduction to Modern Astrophysics §16.3 "The Physics of Degenerate Matter – Carroll & Ostlie, 2007, second edition. ISBN 0-8053-0402-9〕 in physics is a collection of free, non-interacting particles with a pressure and other physical characteristics determined by quantum mechanical effects. It is the analogue of an ideal gas in classical mechanics. The degenerate state of matter, in the sense of deviant from an ideal gas, arises at extraordinarily high density (in compact stars) or at extremely low temperatures in laboratories.〔see http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap100228.html〕〔Andrew G. Truscott, Kevin E. Strecker, William I. McAlexander, Guthrie Partridge, and Randall G. Hulet, "Observation of Fermi Pressure in a Gas of Trapped Atoms", Science, 2 March 2001〕 It occurs for matter particles such as electrons, neutrons, protons, and fermions in general and is referred to as electron-degenerate matter, neutron-degenerate matter, etc. In a mixture of particles, such as ions and electrons in white dwarfs or metals, the electrons may be degenerate, while the ions are not.
In a quantum mechanical description, free particles limited to a finite volume may take only a discrete set of energies, called quantum states. The Pauli exclusion principle prevents identical fermions from occupying the same quantum state. At lowest total energy (when the thermal energy of the particles is negligible), all the lowest energy quantum states are filled. This state is referred to as full degeneracy. The pressure (called degeneracy pressure or Fermi pressure) remains nonzero even near absolute zero temperature.〔〔 Adding particles or reducing the volume forces the particles into higher-energy quantum states. This requires a compression force, and is made manifest as a resisting pressure. The key feature is that this degeneracy pressure does not depend on the temperature and only on the density of the fermions. It keeps dense stars in equilibrium independent of the thermal structure of the star.
Degenerate matter is also called a Fermi gas or a degenerate gas. A degenerate mass whose fermions have velocities close to the speed of light (particle energy larger than its rest mass energy) is called relativistic degenerate matter.
Degenerate matter was first described for a mixture of ions and electrons in 1926 by Ralph H. Fowler,〔(On Dense Matter ), R. H. Fowler, ''Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society'' 87 (1926), pp. 114–122.〕 showing that at densities observed in white dwarfs the electrons (obeying Fermi–Dirac statistics, the term degenerate was not yet in use) have a pressure much higher than the partial pressure of the ions.
==Concept==
If a plasma is cooled and compressed repeatedly, it will eventually not be possible to compress the plasma any further. This is by the Pauli exclusion principle, which states that two fermions cannot share the same quantum state. When in in this highly compressed state, since there is no extra space for any particles, a particle's location is extremely defined. This is due to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, , where Δ''p'' is the uncertainty in the particle's momentum and Δ''x'' is the uncertainty in position. This implies that the momentum of a highly compressed particle is extremely uncertain, since the particles are located in a very confined space. Therefore, ''even though the plasma is cold'', such particles must be moving very fast on average. This leads to the conclusion that, in order to compress an object into a very small space, tremendous force is required to control its particles' momentum.
Unlike a classical ideal gas, whose pressure is proportional to its temperature (, where ''P'' is pressure, ''V'' is the volume, ''n'' is the number of particles—typically atoms or molecules—''k'' is Boltzmann's constant, and ''T'' is temperature), the pressure exerted by degenerate matter depends only weakly on its temperature. In particular, the pressure remains nonzero even at absolute zero temperature. At relatively low densities, the pressure of a fully degenerate gas is given by , where ''K'' depends on the properties of the particles making up the gas. At very high densities, where most of the particles are forced into quantum states with relativistic energies, the pressure is given by , where ''K''′ again depends on the properties of the particles making up the gas.〔''Stellar Structure and Evolution'' section 15.3 – R Kippenhahn & A. Weigert, 1990, 3rd printing 1994. ISBN 0-387-58013-1〕
All matter experiences both normal thermal pressure and degeneracy pressure, but in commonly encountered gases, thermal pressure dominates so much that degeneracy pressure can be ignored. Likewise, degenerate matter still has normal thermal pressure, but at extremely high densities, the degeneracy pressure usually dominates.
Exotic examples of degenerate matter include neutronium, strange matter, metallic hydrogen and white dwarf matter. Degeneracy pressure contributes to the pressure of conventional solids, but these are not usually considered to be degenerate matter because a significant contribution to their pressure is provided by electrical repulsion of atomic nuclei and the screening of nuclei from each other by electrons. In metals it is useful to treat the conduction electrons alone as a degenerate, free electron gas while the majority of the electrons are regarded as occupying bound quantum states. This contrasts with degenerate matter that forms the body of a white dwarf, where all the electrons would be treated as occupying free particle momentum states.

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