User:Tohline/AxisymmetricConfigurations/Storyline
(Initially) Axisymmetric Configurations
"As a practical matter, discussions of the effect of rotation on self-gravitating fluid masses divide into two categories: the structure of steady-state configurations, and the oscillations and the stability of these configurations." |
— Drawn from N. R. Lebovitz (1967), ARAA, 5, 465 |
We add a third category, namely, the nonlinear dynamical evolution of systems that are revealed via stability analyses to be unstable. |
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Storyline
Once you have learned how to construct spherically symmetric, equilibrium self-gravitating configurations from gases that obey a variety of different equations of state, it is natural to ask how those structures will be modified if they are rotating. You might naturally ask, as well, how techniques that you have learned to use to examine the stability of each spherically symmetric, equilibrium configuration — principally, linear stability analyses and free-energy analyses — might be extended to permit you to examine the stability of rotating equilibrium structures.
For more than 250 years the astrophysics (and mathematics) community has understood what set of equations must be solved simultaneously in order to build equilibrium models of rotating, self-gravitating gases. The first — and still extraordinarily relevant — publication was the book by Colin Maclaurin (1742) titled, A Treatise of Fluxions.
See Also
© 2014 - 2021 by Joel E. Tohline |