Difference between revisions of "User:Tohline/SSC/Structure/BonnorEbert"
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=Pressure-Bounded Isothermal Sphere (structure)= | =Pressure-Bounded Isothermal Sphere= | ||
As has been [[User:Tohline/SSC/Structure/IsothermalSphere#Isothermal_Sphere_(structure)|derived and discussed elsewhere]], an ''isolated'' isothermal sphere has a density profile that extends to infinity and, correspondingly, an unbounded total mass. In an astrophysical context, neither of these properties is desirable. A more realistic isothermal configuration can be constructed by embedding the structure in a low density, but hot external medium whose pressure, <math>P_e</math>, confines the isothermal configuration to a finite size. In a mathematical model, this can be accomplished by ripping off an outer layer of the isothermal configuration down to the radius — label it <math>\xi_e</math> — at which the configuration's original (internal) pressure equals <math>P_e</math>; the interior of the configuration that remains — containing mass <math>M_{\xi_e}</math> — should be unaltered and in equilibrium. (This will work only for spherically symmetric configurations, as the gravitation acceleration at any location only depends on the mass contained inside that radius.) | |||
[http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1955ZA.....37..217E Ebert] (1955) and [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1956MNRAS.116..351B Bonnor] (1956) are credited with constructing the first such models and, most significantly, discovering that, for any specified sound speed and applied external pressure, there is a mass above which no equilibrium configuration exists. We present, here, the salient elements of these (essentially equivalent) derivations. Prior to studying this discussion of pressure-bounded isothermal equilibrium configurations, however, we recommend studying our related discussion of pressure-bounded n = 5 polytropes. | |||
==Governing Relation== | ==Governing Relation== | ||
The equilibrium structure of an ''isolated'' isothermal sphere, as derived by [http://books.google.com/books?id=MiDQAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=true Emden] (1907), has been [[User:Tohline/SSC/Structure/IsothermalSphere#Isothermal_Sphere_(structure)|discussed elsewhere]]. From this separate discussion we appreciate that the governing ODE is, | The equilibrium structure of an ''isolated'' isothermal sphere, as derived by [http://books.google.com/books?id=MiDQAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=true Emden] (1907), has been [[User:Tohline/SSC/Structure/IsothermalSphere#Isothermal_Sphere_(structure)|discussed elsewhere]]. From this separate discussion we appreciate that the governing ODE is, |
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Pressure-Bounded Isothermal Sphere
As has been derived and discussed elsewhere, an isolated isothermal sphere has a density profile that extends to infinity and, correspondingly, an unbounded total mass. In an astrophysical context, neither of these properties is desirable. A more realistic isothermal configuration can be constructed by embedding the structure in a low density, but hot external medium whose pressure, <math>P_e</math>, confines the isothermal configuration to a finite size. In a mathematical model, this can be accomplished by ripping off an outer layer of the isothermal configuration down to the radius — label it <math>\xi_e</math> — at which the configuration's original (internal) pressure equals <math>P_e</math>; the interior of the configuration that remains — containing mass <math>M_{\xi_e}</math> — should be unaltered and in equilibrium. (This will work only for spherically symmetric configurations, as the gravitation acceleration at any location only depends on the mass contained inside that radius.)
Ebert (1955) and Bonnor (1956) are credited with constructing the first such models and, most significantly, discovering that, for any specified sound speed and applied external pressure, there is a mass above which no equilibrium configuration exists. We present, here, the salient elements of these (essentially equivalent) derivations. Prior to studying this discussion of pressure-bounded isothermal equilibrium configurations, however, we recommend studying our related discussion of pressure-bounded n = 5 polytropes.
Governing Relation
The equilibrium structure of an isolated isothermal sphere, as derived by Emden (1907), has been discussed elsewhere. From this separate discussion we appreciate that the governing ODE is,
<math>\frac{1}{r^2} \frac{d}{dr}\biggl( r^2 \frac{d\ln\rho}{dr} \biggr) =- \frac{4\pi G}{c_s^2} \rho \, ,</math>
where,
<math>c_s^2 = \frac{\Re T}{\bar{\mu}} = \frac{k T}{m_u \bar{\mu}} \, ,</math>
is the square of the isothermal sound speed. In their studies of pressure-bounded isothermal spheres, Ebert (1955, ZA, 37, 217) and Bonnor (1956, MNRAS, 116, 351) both started with this governing ODE, but developed its solution in different ways. Here we present both developments while highlighting transformations between the two.
Derivation by Bonnor (edited) | translation | Derivation by Ebert (edited) |
<math>G \Leftrightarrow \gamma</math> | ||
<math>\rho_c \Leftrightarrow \rho_0</math> | ||
<math>\frac{kT}{m} \Leftarrow c_s^2 \Rightarrow \frac{\Re T_0}{\mu}</math> | ||
<math>\beta^{1/2}\lambda^{-1/2} \Leftrightarrow l_0</math> | ||
<math>e^{-\psi} \Leftrightarrow \eta</math> |
Both of these dimensionless governing ODEs — Bonnor's Eq. (2.8) and Ebert's Eq. (17) — are identical to the dimensionless expression derived by Emden (see the presentation elsewhere), namely,
<math> \frac{d^2v_1}{d\mathfrak{r}_1^2} +\frac{2}{\mathfrak{r}_1} \frac{dv_1}{dr} + e^{v_1} = 0 \, . </math>
The translation from Emden-to-Bonnor-to-Ebert is straightforward:
<math> \mathfrak{r}_1 = \xi|_\mathrm{Bonner} = \xi|_\mathrm{Ebert}~~~~\mathrm{and}~~~~e^{v_1} = e^{-\psi} = \eta \, . </math>
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