QCD phase diagram and its application in compact stars: A holographic hardwall approach
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Abstract
Matter making up the interior of stars consists of an interacting soup of nucleons and
photons. Calculating the equations of state of this nuclear matter at high densities and
temperatures is complicated by the strong nature of the interactions among the nucleons
and the multiple energy scales involved. A radical new approach to these systems called
AdS holography tries to obtain the equations of state via gravity calculations in higher
spacetime dimensions. In this thesis, we have obtained the equations of state and a phase
diagram of QCD-like theories at large densities and low temperatures by using a particular
version of holography termed the hardwall model.
We have generalized the hardwall model to 10-d with D7-branes which allowed us
to compute the phases at finite temperatures for various quark masses. This approach
produces phenomenologically interesting inequalities, also at nonzero density. However,
we had to return to the 5D hardwall models to study the nature of a suitable hologram
of the low density confined phase. An important contribution of our work is the use of
modified IR boundary conditions which incorporate phenomenology. Furthermore, we
analyzed baryonic condensates within these confined phases. Interestingly, we find that
condensing operators have a restricted range of scaling dimensions.
The equations of state derived in these phases are then utilized to calculate the mass
radius relation of compact stars. We conclude that the cores of compact stars will exhibit
condensates at low temperatures and supranuclear densities.