Title: Stochastic Problems in Physics and Astronomy
1Stochastic Problems in Physics and Astronomy
- S. Chandrasekhar
- Rev. Mod. Phys. 15, 1 (1943)
2Number of citations per area(ISI Web of Science)
3OUTLINE
- Random walks (random flights)
- Brownian motion
- Probability after-effects
- Stellar dynamics
- Planet formation
- Sunspots
- Cosmic rays
- Conclusions
4INTRODUCTION
- Application of probability methods to problems as
diverse as colloid chemistry and stellar dynamics - Common characteristic large number of variables
governed by probability laws - Specification of distribution function
of a quantity which is the result of a large
number of other quantities, with distributions
over a range of values
5RANDOM FLIGHTS
6RANDOM FLIGHTS (ii)
7RANDOM FLIGHTS (iii)
- There are ways of
arriving at m . Therefore, the probability that
the - particle arrives at m is
- For large n,
8RANDOM FLIGHTS (iv)
- Introducing the variable xml for the
displacement, where l is the length of a step,
and - assuming that the particle suffers N
displacements per unit time, we can write - where
9RANDOM FLIGHTS (v)
10RANDOM FLIGHTS (vi)Three-dimensional case
11RANDOM FLIGHTS (vii)Spherical distribution of
displacements
12RANDOM FLIGHTS (viii)General solution for large N
- Assuming that all individual displacements are
governed by the same - distribution function t, we can write
- After performing a rotation of the coordinate
system, the distribution function - for the position of the particle is
-
- This is an ellipsoidal distribution centered at
13RANDOM FLIGHTS (ix)Formulation in terms of a
differential equation
- It is possible to make a description of the
problem through the equation - the solution of which is
14BROWNIAN MOTION
- Motions of Brownian particles are maintained by
fluctuations in the collisions with molecules
15BROWNIAN MOTION (ii)Free particle
- The equation of motion for a free particle is
Langevins equation - Solving this equation has to be understood as
specifying a probability - distribution
16BROWNIAN MOTION (iii)Free particle
17BROWNIAN MOTION (iv)Free particle
- For long enough times (such that a Brownian
particle will suffer a large - number of displacements) the resulting motion can
be regarded - as a random flight, and consequently as a
diffusive process.
18BROWNIAN MOTION (v)Harmonically bound particle
- When an external force field is present, the
Langevin equation becomes - Considering a one-dimensional harmonic
oscillator, this can be written as - What is sought is the probability distribution
19BROWNIAN MOTION (vi)General characteristics
- The increment in the velocity of a Brownian
particle can be written in the form
20PROBABILITY AFTER-EFFECTS
- Consider a small element of volume dV of a
solution containing Brownian - particles in diffusion equilibrium. We perform
observations of the system at constant time
intervals . - For finite time intervals, one can enquire about
the transition probability W(nm) that m
particles will be counted inside dV at a time
, at the beginning of which n particles were
counted. In particular, we can ask about W(nn).
21PROBABILITY AFTER-EFFECTS (ii)
- The mean life of a fluctuation state n (once we
count n particles, and after having counted n
particles successively thereafter, how much time
elapses until we count a number of particles
different from n) is - The time of recurrence of a fluctuation state n
is -
- where is the
frequency with which different numbers of - particles will be counted in dV, and is the
mean number of particles in dV
22STELLAR DYNAMICS
- Analogy with Brownian motion
- Encounters with small impact parameters (which
cause appreciable deflections) are rare - Encounters with large impact parameters (which
are more frequent) are ineffective
23STELLAR DYNAMICS (ii)
- Difference with Brownian motion
- Stars influence each other, whereas colloidal
particles are primarily influenced by the
molecules of the fluid - In both cases, even though star-star and
molecule-colloidal particle encounters hardly
affects the motion, what is important is the
cumulative effect of a large number of separate
events - The force per unit mass acting on a single star
is due to the rest of the system as a whole. But
fluctuations in the complexion of the local
stellar distribution introduce fluctuations in
this force
24STELLAR DYNAMICS (iii)
- Statistical character of the force acting on a
star
25STELLAR DYNAMICS (iv)Black hole dynamics in a
stellar system
- Three forces acting on the black hole (Chatterjee
et al 2002) - Restoring force of the stellar potential (typical
cluster length agtgtr) - Dynamical friction
- Random force F(t) due to encounters with stars
- The equation of motion for the BH is
-
26STELLAR DYNAMICS (v)Black hole dynamics in a
stellar system
27PLANET FORMATION
- Long term behavior of an ensemble of
planetesimals revolving around the Sun, until - they are captured by a protoplanet
- (Hayashi, C., Nakazawa, K., and Adachi, I., Publ.
Astron. Soc. Japan 29, 163)
28PLANET FORMATION (ii)
- Gravitational encounters between particles are
stochastic processes - Rates of change of semi-major axis, eccentricity,
and inclination are calculated - By evaluating mean-square deviation of semi-major
axis, a diffusion coefficient in a-space can be
calculated as -
-
- (compare with the diffusion coefficient for
random flights, -
- where n is the number of displacements per unit
time)
29PLANET FORMATION (iii)
- Simulations of dust growth in Brownian stage
(Kempf, S. et al 1999) - The dynamics of a particle of mass m and
friction time are modeled by the Langevin
equation - where the friction time is given by
(time needed for particle to dissipate its
- kinetic energy)
- The evolution of the friction time is determined
by the aggregate structure - The aggregates are self-similar the dependence
of their mass on their radius is assumed to be of
the form , where D is the fractal
dimension of the particle structure
30PLANET FORMATION (iv)
- (Meakin,
P. and Donn, B. 1988, ApJ, 329, L39) - In the cold part of a protoplanetary disk, the
time scales for pure Brownian growth are too
large to explain the formation of planets within
the life time of the disk (Brownian growth is
significant only during early stages)
31SUNSPOTS
32SUNSPOTS (ii)
- Associated with buoyancy of magnetic flux tubes
33SUNSPOTS (iii)
- A sunspot is a region of enhanced heat transport
from the convective zone (Parker 1974) - The convective transport of heat is a stochastic
process that can be described by an equation for
the ensemble average temperature, in
statistically steady turbulence
34SUNSPOTS (iv)
35COSMIC RAY PROPAGATION
- High energy protons and nuclei, the precise
- origin of which is not known.
- Suggested origins SN I,II novae formation
- of giant molecular clouds galaxy formation
- Energy range eV
36COSMIC RAY PROPAGATION (ii)
- Relevant works
- Motion of charged particles in a spatially random
magnetic field (Jokipii 1966) - Transport of protons in supernova shells (Harding
et al. 1991, ApJ, 378,163) - Mixing of cosmic rays does not extend far into
the shell, so protons diffuse only in inner
regions - A region of thickness h is formed outside
-
the pulsar wind cavity,
containing cosmic -
rays, tangled magnetic
fields and matter. -
Not all cosmic rays in
that region take -
part in high energy
interactions some -
diffuse out of the
envelope. To calculate -
the interaction rate of
protons, cosmic ray -
diffusion is simulated as
a 1D random -
walk, with a step
. If the -
proton interacts, a new
energy between 0 -
and the energy before
interaction is assigned to it -
if it does not, its
energy is appropriately reduced -
to account for adiabatic
losses.
37CONCLUSIONS
- Stochastic phenomena are ubiquitous in
astrophysical systems, spanning a large range of
length scales - Many diffusive processes can be modeled as random
walks, Brownian motion - In order to be able to treat a force as
stochastic, the time scale of fluctuations has to
be shorter than the typical time scale in which
other dynamic variables change -