Neutron Stars as Fractal Dipole Liquids: A Unified Fractal Quantum Field Theory Approach
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Neutron stars represent one of the most extreme laboratories in the universe, where nuclear matter is compressed beyond terrestrial densities yet does not collapse into a black hole. In conventional astrophysics, neutron star stability is explained through nuclear degeneracy pressure and superfluid phases of neutrons. In this work, we propose a novel reinterpretation based on the Unified Fractal Quantum Field Theory (UFQFT). We argue that nucleons retain their fundamental structure under extreme gravitational confinement but undergo a collective phase transition into a “fractal dipole liquid.” In this state, neutrons form molecular-like bound configurations stabilized by their intrinsic dipole moments, preventing weak decay and producing a macroscopic “neutron sea.” Proton-to-neutron conversion via electron capture further enhances this stability while driving an effective cooling mechanism. Within this framework, neutron stars occupy a distinct phase space between ordinary nuclear matter and black hole cores, characterized by a fractal dimension D≈2.65–2.7. The transition from neutron star to black hole is interpreted as a shift from a multi-nucleon dipole-resonant liquid to a single-core fractal nucleon, achievable only through accretion or stellar mergers that increase mass beyond a critical threshold. We discuss observational implications for cooling curves, gravitational wave signatures, and high-energy transients, providing a pathway to distinguish neutron stars from low-mass black holes. This approach unifies nuclear stability, stellar evolution, and black hole formation under a single fractal field-theoretic paradigm.