Özet:
In this thesis, we first investigated the effect of Λ pairing on the ground state
properties of hypernuclei within the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov formalism. The SLy5
Skyrme functional is used in the NN channel, while for NΛ channel we employ three
functionals fitted from microscopic Brueckner-Hartree-Fock calculations: DF-NSC89,
DF-NSC97a and DF-NSC97f. These functionals reproduce the sequence of single-Λ
experimental binding energies from light to heavy hypernuclei. For the ΛΛ channel,
we used the empirical prescription EmpC, calibrated to 1 MeV on the experimental
bond energy in 6HeΛΛ. Based on this density-functional approach, several nuclei have
been studied with nucleon closed-shells and Λ open-shells. A ΛΛ pairing interaction
is introduced, which magnitude is calibrated to be consistent with the maximum BCS
predictions for the Λ pairing gap in hypernuclear matter. In this way, we provide an
upper bound for the prediction of the Λ pairing gap and its effects in hypernuclei.
We have shown that the effects of the ΛΛ pairing depends on hypernuclei. The
condensation energy is predicted to be about 3 MeV as a maximum value, yielding
small corrections on density distributions and shell structure. Generally, we found
that ΛΛ pairing could be active if the energy gap between shells is smaller than
3 MeV. Under this condition, Λ pairing could impact densities and binding energies.
Since only a weak spin-orbit interaction is expected in the Λ channel, Λ states are
highly degenerated and usually levels are distant by more than 3 MeV in energy. In
summary, it is shown that the Λ-related pairing effect can usually be neglected in
most of hypernuclei, except for hypernuclei which have a single particle gap lower
than 3 MeV around the Fermi level. In addition, conditions on both Fermi energies
and orbital angular momenta are expected to quench the nucleon-Λ pairing for most
of hypernuclei.
The second part of the thesis is devoted to equation of states in neutron stars.
We confronted the tidal deformability values extracted from the gravitational event
GW170817 to nuclear physics constraints within a semi-agnostic approach for the
dense matter equation of state. We used Bayesian statistics to combine together
low density nuclear physics data, such as the ab-initio predictions based on χEFT
interactions or the isoscalar giant monopole resonance, and astrophysical constraints
from neutron stars, such as the maximum mass of neutron stars or the probability
density function of the tidal deformability Λ˜ obtained from the GW170817 event.
The posteriors probability distribution functions are marginalized over several nuclear
empirical parameters (Lsym, Ksym, Qsat and Qsym), as well as over observational
quantities such as the 1.4M radius R1.4 and the pressure at twice the saturation
density P(2nsat). The correlations between Lsym and Ksym and between Ksat and Qsat
are also further analyzed. It is found that there is a marked tension between the
gravitational wave observational data and the nuclear physics inputs for the Lsym and
R1.4 marginal probability distributions. This could be a hint for nucleons to more
exotic particles phase transition inside of the core of neutron stars. We also conclude
that increasing the accuracy on the determination of tidal deformability from the
gravitational wave, as well as Mc
from the isoscalar giant monopole resonance, will
lead to a better determination of Ksat and Qsat.