Title: Gravitational Dynamics
1Gravitational Dynamics
2Gravitational Dynamics can be applied to
- Two body systemsbinary stars
- Planetary Systems
- Stellar Clustersopen globular
- Galactic Structurenuclei/bulge/disk/halo
- Clusters of Galaxies
- The universelarge scale structure
3Syllabus
- Phase Space Fluid f(x,v)
- Eqn of motion
- Poissons equation
- Stellar Orbits
- Integrals of motion (E,J)
- Jeans Theorem
- Spherical Equilibrium
- Virial Theorem
- Jeans Equation
- Interacting Systems
- Tides?Satellites?Streams
- Relaxation?collisions
4How to model motions of 1010stars in a galaxy?
- Direct N-body approach (as in simulations)
- At time t particles have (mi,xi,yi,zi,vxi,vyi,vzi)
, i1,2,...,N (feasible for Nltlt106). - Statistical or fluid approach (N very large)
- At time t particles have a spatial density
distribution n(x,y,z)m, e.g., uniform, - at each point have a velocity distribution
G(vx,vy,vz), e.g., a 3D Gaussian.
5N-body Potential and Force
- In N-body system with mass m1mN, the
gravitational acceleration g(r) and potential
f(r) at position r is given by
r12
r
mi
Ri
6Eq. of Motion in N-body
- Newtons law a point mass m at position r moving
with a velocity dr/dt with Potential energy F(r)
mf(r) experiences a Force Fmg , accelerates
with following Eq. of Motion
7Orbits defined by EoM Gravity
- Solve for a complete prescription of history of a
particle r(t) - E.g., if G0 ? F0, F(r)cst, ? dxi/dt vxici
? xi(t) ci t x0, likewise for yi,zi(t) - E.g., relativistic neutrinos in universe go
straight lines - Repeat for all N particles.
- ? N-body system fully described
8Example 5-body rectangle problem
- Four point masses m3,4,5 at rest of three
vertices of a P-triangle, integrate with time
step1 and ½ find the positions at time t1.
9Star clusters differ from air
- Size doesnt matter
- size of starsltltdistance between them
- ?stars collide far less frequently than molecules
in air. - Inhomogeneous
- In a Gravitational Potential f(r)
- Spectacularly rich in structure because f(r) is
non-linear function of r
10Why Potential f(r) ?
- More convenient to work with force, potential per
unit mass. e.g. KE?½v2 - Potential f(r) is scaler, function of r only,
- Easier to work with than force (vector, 3
components) - Simply relates to orbital energy E f(r) ½v2
112nd Lec
12Example energy per unit mass
- The orbital energy of a star is given by
0 since and
0 for static potential.
So orbital Energy is Conserved in a static
potential.
13Example Force field of two-body system in
Cartesian coordinates
14Example Energy is conserved
- The orbital energy of a star is given by
0 since and
0 for static potential.
So orbital Energy is Conserved in a static
potential.
153rd Lec
- Animation of GC formation
16A fluid element Potential Gravity
- For large N or a continuous fluid, the gravity dg
and potential df due to a small mass element dM
is calculated by replacing mi with dM
r12
dM
r
d3R
R
17Potential in a galaxy
- Replace a summation over all N-body particles
with the integration - Remember dM?(R)d3R for average density ?(R) in
small volume d3R - So the equation for the gravitational force
becomes
R?Ri
18Poissons Equation
- Relates potential with density
- Proof hints
19Poissons Equation
- Poissons equation relates the potential to the
density of matter generating the potential. - It is given by
20Gausss Theorem
- Gausss theorem is obtained by integrating
poissons equation - i.e. the integral ,over any closed surface, of
the normal component of the gradient of the
potential is equal to 4?G times the Mass enclosed
within that surface.
21Laplacian in various coordinates
224th Lec
23- From Gravitational Force to Potential
From Potential to Density
Use Poissons Equation
The integrated form of Poissons equation is
given by
24More on Spherical Systems
- Newton proved 2 results which enable us to
calculate the potential of any spherical system
very easily. - NEWTONS 1st THEOREMA body that is inside a
spherical shell of matter experiences no net
gravitational force from that shell - NEWTONS 2nd THEOREMThe gravitational force on a
body that lies outside a closed spherical shell
of matter is the same as it would be if all the
matter were concentrated at its centre.
25From Spherical Density to Mass
M(rdr)
M(r)
26Poissons eq. in Spherical systems
- Poissons eq. in a spherical potential with no ?
or F dependence is
27Proof of Poissons Equation
- Consider a spherical distribution of mass of
density ?(r).
g
r
28- Take d/dr and multiply r2 ?
- Take d/dr and divide r2?
29Sun escapes if Galactic potential well is made
shallower
30Solar system accelerates weakly in MW
- 200km/s circulation
- g(R0 8kpc)0.8a0,
- a01.2 10-8 cm2 s-1
- Merely gn 0.5 a0 from all stars/gas
- Obs. g(R20 R0)
- 20 gn
- 0.02 a0
- g-gn (0-1)a0
- GM R if weak!
- Motivates
- M(R) dark particles
- G(R) (MOND)
31Circular Velocity
- CIRCULAR VELOCITY the speed of a test particle
in a circular orbit at radius r.
For a point mass
For a homogeneous sphere
32Escape Velocity
- ESCAPE VELOCITY velocity required in order for
an object to escape from a gravitational
potential well and arrive at ? with zero KE. - It is the velocity for which the kinetic energy
balances potential.
-ve
33Plummer Model
- PLUMMER MODELthe special case of the
gravitational potential of a galaxy. This is a
spherically symmetric potential of the form - Corresponding to a density
which can be proved using poissons equation.
34- The potential of the plummer model looks like
this
?
r
?
35- Since, the potential is spherically symmetric g
is also given by - ?
- The density can then be obtained from
- dM is found from the equation for M above and
dV4?r2dr. - This gives
(as before from Poissons)
36Tutorial Question 1 Singular Isothermal Sphere
- Has Potential Beyond ro
- And Inside rltr0
- Prove that the potential AND gravity is
continuous at rro if - Prove density drops sharply to 0 beyond r0, and
inside r0 - Integrate density to prove total massM0
- What is circular and escape velocities at rr0?
- Draw Log-log diagrams of M(r), Vesc(r), Vcir(r),
Phi(r), rho(r), g(r) for V0200km/s, r0100kpc.
37Tutorial Question 2 Isochrone Potential
- Prove G is approximately 4 x 10-3
(km/s)2pc/Msun. - Given an ISOCHRONE POTENTIAL
- For M105 Msun, b1pc, show the central escape
velocity (GM/b)1/2 20km/s. - Argue why M must be the total mass. What
fraction of the total mass is inside radius
rb1pc? Calculate the local Vcir(b) and Vesc(b)
and acceleration g(b). What is your unit of g?
Draw log-log diagram of Vcir(r). - What is the central density in Msun pc-3?
Compare with average density inside r1pc.
(Answer in BT, p38)