On superconductivity of matter at hight density and the effects of inducing nuclear chirality in molecular structures
Publication: Research - peer-review › Journal article – Annual report year: 2013
Standard
On superconductivity of matter at hight density and the effects of inducing nuclear chirality in molecular structures. / da Providëncia, J. ; Jalkanen, Karl J.; Bohr, Henrik.
In: Current Physical Chemistry, Vol. 3, No. 1, 2013, p. 77-82.Publication: Research - peer-review › Journal article – Annual report year: 2013
Harvard
APA
CBE
MLA
Vancouver
Author
Bibtex
}
RIS
TY - JOUR
T1 - On superconductivity of matter at hight density and the effects of inducing nuclear chirality in molecular structures
A1 - da Providëncia,J.
A1 - Jalkanen,Karl J.
A1 - Bohr,Henrik
AU - da Providëncia,J.
AU - Jalkanen,Karl J.
AU - Bohr,Henrik
PB - Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Superconductivity is described by the well-known Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory, which is a symmetry breaking approximation. Color superconductivity shows up in extremely high density matter and temperature, which is here investigated and compared to the other end of the scale of low energy/temperature of organic superconductors. An approach to color superconductivity conciliating the BCS theory with the color SU(3) symmetry, the cornerstone of the rigorous theory of the strong interaction, Quantum Chromo-Dynamics (QCD), is used to describe the superconducting phase. The magnetization of a high density relativistic fluid of elementary particles is studied. We find that the magnetic field of spin polarized matter with densities of 2 to 30, where 0 is the equilibrium density of nuclear matter, is rather huge, of the order of 1017 Gauss. Finally we look at the chiral nature of nuclear forces and interactions as they possibly relate to chirality of nuclei (atoms) in molecules as a source of chirality in amino acids and hence in life. Previous works have not investigated the nuclear forces as a possible bias which initiated the bias towards L-amino acids as the building blocks on proteins, and later life.
AB - Superconductivity is described by the well-known Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory, which is a symmetry breaking approximation. Color superconductivity shows up in extremely high density matter and temperature, which is here investigated and compared to the other end of the scale of low energy/temperature of organic superconductors. An approach to color superconductivity conciliating the BCS theory with the color SU(3) symmetry, the cornerstone of the rigorous theory of the strong interaction, Quantum Chromo-Dynamics (QCD), is used to describe the superconducting phase. The magnetization of a high density relativistic fluid of elementary particles is studied. We find that the magnetic field of spin polarized matter with densities of 2 to 30, where 0 is the equilibrium density of nuclear matter, is rather huge, of the order of 1017 Gauss. Finally we look at the chiral nature of nuclear forces and interactions as they possibly relate to chirality of nuclei (atoms) in molecules as a source of chirality in amino acids and hence in life. Previous works have not investigated the nuclear forces as a possible bias which initiated the bias towards L-amino acids as the building blocks on proteins, and later life.
JO - Current Physical Chemistry
JF - Current Physical Chemistry
SN - 1877-9468
IS - 1
VL - 3
SP - 77
EP - 82
ER -