Stellar dynamics is the branch of
astrophysics
Astrophysics is a science that employs the methods and principles of physics and chemistry in the study of astronomical objects and phenomena. As one of the founders of the discipline said, Astrophysics "seeks to ascertain the nature of the he ...
which describes in a statistical way the collective motions of
star
A star is an astronomical object comprising a luminous spheroid of plasma held together by its gravity. The nearest star to Earth is the Sun. Many other stars are visible to the naked eye at night, but their immense distances from Earth make ...
s subject to their mutual
gravity
In physics, gravity () is a fundamental interaction which causes mutual attraction between all things with mass or energy. Gravity is, by far, the weakest of the four fundamental interactions, approximately 1038 times weaker than the str ...
. The essential difference from
celestial mechanics
Celestial mechanics is the branch of astronomy that deals with the motions of objects in outer space. Historically, celestial mechanics applies principles of physics (classical mechanics) to astronomical objects, such as stars and planets, to ...
is that the number of body

Typical galaxies have upwards of millions of macroscopic gravitating bodies and countless number of neutrinos and perhaps other dark microscopic bodies. Also each star contributes more or less equally to the total gravitational field, whereas in celestial mechanics the pull of a massive body dominates any satellite orbits.
Connection with fluid dynamics
Stellar dynamics also has connections to the field of plasma physics. The two fields underwent significant development during a similar time period in the early 20th century, and both borrow mathematical formalism originally developed in the field of
fluid mechanics
Fluid mechanics is the branch of physics concerned with the mechanics of fluids (liquids, gases, and plasmas) and the forces on them.
It has applications in a wide range of disciplines, including mechanical, aerospace, civil, chemical and ...
.
In accretion disks and stellar surfaces, the dense plasma or gas particles collide very frequently, and collisions result in equipartition and perhaps viscosity under magnetic field. We see various sizes for accretion disks and stellar atmosphere, both made of enormous number of microscopic particle mass,
*
at stellar surfaces,
*
around Sun-like stars or km-sized stellar black holes,
*
around million solar mass black holes (about AU-sized) in centres of galaxies.
The system crossing time scale is long in stellar dynamics, where it is handy to note that
The long timescale means that, unlike gas particles in accretion disks, stars in galaxy disks very rarely see a collision in their stellar lifetime. However, galaxies collide occasionally in galaxy clusters, and stars have close encounters occasionally in star clusters.
As a rule of thumb, the typical scales concerned (see the Upper Portion of P.C.Budassi's Logarithmic Map of the Universe) are
*
for M13 Star Cluster,
*
for M31 Disk Galaxy,
*
for neutrinos in the Bullet Clusters, which is a merging system of ''N'' = 1000 galaxies.
Connection with Kepler problem and 3-body problem
At a superficial level, all of stellar dynamics might be formulated as an N-body problem
by
Newton's second law
Newton's laws of motion are three basic Scientific law, laws of classical mechanics that describe the relationship between the motion of an object and the forces acting on it. These laws can be paraphrased as follows:
# A body remains at re ...
, where the equation of motion (EOM) for internal interactions of an isolated stellar system of N members can be written down as,
Here in the N-body system, any individual member,
is influenced by the gravitational potentials of the remaining
members.
In practice, except for in the highest performance computer simulations, it is not feasible to calculate rigorously the future of a large N system this way. Also this EOM gives very little intuition. Historically, the methods utilised in stellar dynamics originated from the fields of both
classical mechanics
Classical mechanics is a physical theory describing the motion of macroscopic objects, from projectiles to parts of machinery, and astronomical objects, such as spacecraft, planets, stars, and galaxies. For objects governed by classical ...
and
statistical mechanics. In essence, the fundamental problem of stellar dynamics is the
N-body problem, where the N members refer to the members of a given stellar system. Given the large number of objects in a stellar system, stellar dynamics can address both the global, statistical properties of many orbits as well as the specific data on the positions and velocities of individual orbits.
Concept of a gravitational potential field
Stellar dynamics involves determining the gravitational potential of a substantial number of stars. The stars can be modeled as point masses whose orbits are determined by the combined interactions with each other. Typically, these point masses represent stars in a variety of clusters or galaxies, such as a
Galaxy cluster
A galaxy cluster, or a cluster of galaxies, is a structure that consists of anywhere from hundreds to thousands of galaxies that are bound together by gravity, with typical masses ranging from 1014 to 1015 solar masses. They are the second-la ...
, or a
Globular cluster
A globular cluster is a spheroidal conglomeration of stars. Globular clusters are bound together by gravity, with a higher concentration of stars towards their centers. They can contain anywhere from tens of thousands to many millions of memb ...
. Without getting a system's gravitational potential by adding all of the point-mass potentials in the system at every second, stellar dynamicists develop potential models that can accurately model the system while remaining computationally inexpensive.
The gravitational potential,
, of a system is related to the acceleration and the gravitational field,
by:
whereas the potential is related to a (smoothened) mass density,
, via the
Poisson's equation
Poisson's equation is an elliptic partial differential equation of broad utility in theoretical physics. For example, the solution to Poisson's equation is the potential field caused by a given electric charge or mass density distribution; with t ...
in the integral form
or the more common differential form
An example of the Poisson Equation and escape speed in a uniform sphere
Consider an analytically smooth spherical potential
where
takes the meaning of the speed to "escape to the edge"
, and
is the speed to "escape from the edge to infinity". The gravity is like the restoring force of harmonic oscillator inside the sphere, and Keplerian outside as described by the Heaviside functions.
We can fix the normalisation
by computing the corresponding density using the spherical Poisson Equation
where the enclosed mass
Hence the potential model corresponds to a uniform sphere of radius
, total mass
with
Key concepts
While both the equations of motion and Poisson Equation can also take on non-spherical forms, depending on the coordinate system and the symmetry of the physical system, the essence is the same:
The motions of stars in a
galaxy
A galaxy is a system of stars, stellar remnants, interstellar gas, dust, dark matter, bound together by gravity. The word is derived from the Greek ' (), literally 'milky', a reference to the Milky Way galaxy that contains the Solar Sys ...
or in a
globular cluster
A globular cluster is a spheroidal conglomeration of stars. Globular clusters are bound together by gravity, with a higher concentration of stars towards their centers. They can contain anywhere from tens of thousands to many millions of memb ...
are principally determined by the average distribution of the other, distant stars. The infrequent stellar encounters involve processes such as relaxation,
mass segregation,
tidal force
The tidal force is a gravitational effect that stretches a body along the line towards the center of mass of another body due to a gradient (difference in strength) in gravitational field from the other body; it is responsible for diverse phenom ...
s, and
dynamical friction that influence the trajectories of the system's members.
Relativistic Approximations
There are three related approximations made in the Newtonian EOM and Poisson Equation above.
SR and GR
Firstly above equations neglect relativistic corrections, which are of order of
as typical stellar 3-dimensional speed,
km/s, is much below the speed of light.
Eddington Limit
Secondly non-gravitational force is typically negligible in stellar systems. For example, in the vicinity of a typical star the ratio of radiation-to-gravity force on a hydrogen atom or ion,
hence radiation force is negligible in general, except perhaps around a luminous O-type star of mass
, or around a black hole accreting gas at the Eddington limit so that its luminosity-to-mass ratio
is defined by
.
Loss cone
Thirdly a star can be swallowed if coming within a few
Schwarzschild radii of the black hole. This radius of Loss is given by
The loss cone can be visualised by considering infalling particles aiming to the black hole within a small solid angle (a cone in velocity).
These particle with small
have small angular momentum per unit mass
Their small angular momentum (due to ) does not make a high enough barrier near
to force the particle to turn around.
The effective potential
is always positive infinity in Newtonian gravity. However, in GR, it
nosedives to minus infinity near
if
Sparing a rigorous GR treatment, one can verify this
by computing the last stable circular orbit, where the effective potential is at an inflection point
using an approximate classical potential of a Schwarzschild black hole
Tidal disruption radius
A star can be tidally torn by a heavier black hole when coming within the so-called Hill's radius of the black hole, inside which a star's surface gravity yields to the tidal force from the black hole,
i.e.,
For typical black holes of
the destruction radius
where 0.001pc is the stellar spacing in the densest stellar systems (e.g., the nuclear star cluster in the Milky Way centre). Hence (main sequence) stars are generally too compact internally and too far apart spaced to be disrupted by even the strongest black hole tides in galaxy or cluster environment.
Radius of sphere of influence
A particle of mass
with a relative speed V will be deflected when entering the (much larger) cross section
of a black hole. This so-called sphere of influence is loosely defined by, up to a Q-like fudge factor
,
hence for a Sun-like star we have,
i.e., stars will neither be tidally disrupted nor physically hit/swallowed in a typical encounter with the black hole thanks to the high surface escape speed
from any solar mass star, comparable to the internal speed between galaxies in the Bullet Cluster of galaxies, and greater than the typical internal speed
inside all star clusters and in galaxies.
Connections between star loss cone and gravitational gas accretion physics
First consider a heavy black hole of mass
is moving through a dissipational gas of (rescaled) thermal sound speed
and density
, then every gas particle of mass m will likely transfer its relative momentum
to the BH when coming within a cross-section of radius
In a time scale
that the black hole loses half of its streaming velocity, its mass may double by Bondi accretion, a process of capturing most of gas particles that enter its sphere of influence
, dissipate kinetic energy by gas collisions and fall in the black hole. The gas capture rate is
where the polytropic index
is the sound speed in units of velocity dispersion squared, and the rescaled sound speed
, allows us to match the Bondi spherical accretion rate,
for the adiabatic gas
, compared to
of the isothermal case
.
Coming back to star tidal disruption and star capture by a (moving) black hole, setting
, we could summarise the BH's growth rate from gas and stars,
with,
because the black hole consumes a fractional/most part of star/gas particles passing its sphere of influence.
Gravitational dynamical friction
Consider the case that a heavy black hole of mass
moves relative to a background of stars in random motion in
a cluster of total mass
with a mean number density
within a typical size
.
Intuition says that gravity causes the light bodies to accelerate and gain momentum and kinetic energy (see slingshot effect). By conservation of energy and momentum, we may conclude that the heavier body will be slowed by an amount to compensate. Since there is a loss of momentum and kinetic energy for the body under consideration, the effect is called dynamical friction.
After certain time of relaxations the heavy black hole's kinetic energy should be in equal partition with the less-massive background objects. The slow-down of the black hole can be described as
where
is called a dynamical friction time.
Dynamical friction time vs Crossing time in a virialised system
Consider a Mach-1 BH, which travels initially at the sound speed
, hence its Bondi radius
satisfies
where
the sound speed is
with the prefactor
fixed by the fact that for a uniform spherical cluster of the mass density
, half of a circular period is the time for "sound" to make a oneway crossing in its longest dimension, i.e.,
It is customary to call the "half-diameter" crossing time
the dynamical time scale.
Assume the BH stops after traveling a length of
with its momentum
deposited to
stars in its path, then
the probability of a star being influenced by the BH's Bondi cross section is
More generally, the Equation of Motion of the BH at a general velocity
in the potential
of a sea of stars can be written as
where
is the number of deflection per "diameter" crossing time,
and the Coulomb logarithm modifying factor
discounts friction on a supersonic moving BH with mass
. As a rule of thumb, it takes about a sound crossing
time to "sink" subsonic BHs, from the edge to the centre without overshooting, if they weigh more than 1/8th of the total cluster mass. Lighter and faster holes can stay afloat much longer.
More rigorous formulation of dynamical friction
The full
Chandrasekhar dynamical friction formula for the change in velocity of the object involves integrating over the phase space density of the field of matter and is far from transparent.
It reads as
where
is the number of particles in an infinitesimal cylindrical volume of length
and a cross-section
within the black hole's sphere of influence.
Like the "Couloumb logarithm"
factors in the contribution of distant background particles, here the factor
also
factors in the probability of finding a background slower-than-BH particle to contribute to the drag. The more particles are overtaken by the BH, the more particles drag the BH, and the greater is
. Also the bigger the system, the greater is
.
A background of elementary (gas or dark) particles can also induce dynamical friction, which scales with the mass density of the surrounding medium,
; the lower particle mass m is compensated by the higher number density n. The more massive the object, the more matter will be pulled into the wake.
Summing up the gravitational drag of both collisional gas and collisionless stars, we have
Here the "lagging-behind" fraction for gas and for stars are given by
where we have further assumed that the BH starts to move from time
; the gas is isothermal with sound speed
; the background stars have of (mass) density
in a
Maxwell distribution
Maxwell may refer to:
People
* Maxwell (surname), including a list of people and fictional characters with the name
** James Clerk Maxwell, mathematician and physicist
* Justice Maxwell (disambiguation)
* Maxwell baronets, in the Baronetage of ...
of momentum
with a
Gaussian distribution
In statistics, a normal distribution or Gaussian distribution is a type of continuous probability distribution for a real-valued random variable. The general form of its probability density function is
:
f(x) = \frac e^
The parameter \mu i ...
velocity spread
(called velocity dispersion, typically
).
Interestingly, the
dependence suggests that dynamical friction is from the gravitational pull of by the wake, which is induced by the
gravitational focusing of the massive body in its two-body encounters with background objects.
We see the force is also proportional to the inverse square of the velocity at the high end, hence the fractional rate of energy loss drops rapidly at high velocities.
Dynamical friction is, therefore, unimportant for objects that move relativistically, such as photons. This can be rationalized by realizing that the faster the object moves through the media, the less time there is for a wake to build up behind it. Friction tends to be the highest at the sound barrier, where
.
Gravitational encounters and relaxation
Stars in a stellar system will influence each other's trajectories due to strong and weak gravitational encounters. An encounter between two stars is defined to be strong/weak if their mutual potential energy at the closest passage is comparable/minuscule to their initial kinetic energy. Strong encounters are rare, and they are typically only considered important in dense stellar systems, e.g., a passing star can be sling-shot out by binary stars in the core of a globular cluster.
This means that two stars need to come within a separation,
where we used the Virial Theorem, "mutual potential energy balances twice kinetic energy on average", i.e., "the pairwise potential energy per star balances with twice kinetic energy associated with the sound speed in three directions",
where the factor
is the number of handshakes between a pair of stars without double-counting, the mean pair separation
is only about 40\% of the radius of the uniform sphere.
Note also the similarity of the
Mean free path
The mean free path of strong encounters in a typically
stellar system is then
i.e., it takes about
radius crossings for a typical star to come within a cross-section
to be deflected from its path completely. Hence the mean free time of a strong encounter is much longer than the crossing time
.
Weak encounters
Weak encounters have a more profound effect on the evolution of a stellar system over the course of many passages. The effects of gravitational encounters can be studied with the concept of
relaxation time. A simple example illustrating relaxation is two-body relaxation, where a star's orbit is altered due to the gravitational interaction with another star.
Initially, the subject star travels along an orbit with initial velocity,
, that is perpendicular to the
impact parameter
In physics, the impact parameter is defined as the perpendicular distance between the path of a projectile and the center of a potential field created by an object that the projectile is approaching (see diagram). It is often referred to in ...
, the distance of closest approach, to the field star whose gravitational field will affect the original orbit. Using Newton's laws, the change in the subject star's velocity,
, is approximately equal to the acceleration at the impact parameter, multiplied by the time duration of the acceleration.
The relaxation time can be thought as the time it takes for
to equal
, or the time it takes for the small deviations in velocity to equal the star's initial velocity. The number of "half-diameter" crossings for an average star to relax in a stellar system of
objects is approximately
from a more rigorous calculation than the above mean free time estimates for strong deflection.
The answer makes sense because there is no relaxation for a single body or 2-body system. A better approximation of the ratio of timescales is
, hence the relaxation time for 3-body, 4-body, 5-body, 7-body, 10-body, ..., 42-body, 72-body, 140-body, 210-body, 550-body are about 16, 8, 6, 4, 3, ..., 3, 4, 6, 8, 16 crossings. There is no relaxation for an isolated binary, and the relaxation is the fastest for a 16-body system; it takes about 2.5 crossings for orbits to scatter each other. A system with
have much smoother potential, typically takes
weak encounters to build a strong deflection to change orbital energy significantly.
Relation between friction and relaxation
Clearly that the dynamical friction of a black hole is much faster than the relaxation time by roughly a factor
, but these two are very similar for a cluster of black holes,
For a star cluster or galaxy cluster with, say,
, we have
. Hence encounters of members in these stellar or galaxy clusters are significant during the typical 10 Gyr lifetime.
On the other hand, typical galaxy with, say,
stars, would have a crossing time
and their relaxation time is much longer than the age of the Universe. This justifies modelling galaxy potentials with mathematically smooth functions, neglecting two-body encounters throughout the lifetime of typical galaxies. And inside such a typical galaxy the dynamical friction and accretion on stellar black holes over a 10-Gyr Hubble time change the black hole's velocity and mass by only an insignificant fraction
if the black hole makes up less than 0.1% of the total galaxy mass
. Especially when
, we see that a typical star never experiences an encounter, hence stays on its orbit in a smooth galaxy potential.
The dynamical friction or relaxation time identifies collisionless vs. collisional particle systems. Dynamics on timescales much less than the relaxation time is effectively collisionless because typical star will deviate from its initial orbit size by a tiny fraction
. They are also identified as systems where subject stars interact with a smooth gravitational potential as opposed to the sum of point-mass potentials. The accumulated effects of two-body relaxation in a galaxy can lead to what is known as
mass segregation, where more massive stars gather near the center of clusters, while the less massive ones are pushed towards the outer parts of the cluster.
A Spherical-Cow Summary of Continuity Eq. in Collisional and Collisionless Processes
Having gone through the details of the rather complex interactions of particles in a gravitational system, it is always helpful to zoom out and extract some generic theme, at an affordable price of rigour, so carry on with a lighter load.
First important concept is "gravity balancing motion" near the perturber and for the background as a whole
by consistently ''omitting'' all factors of unity
,
,
etc for clarity, ''approximating'' the combined mass
and
being ''ambiguous'' whether the ''geometry'' of the system is a thin/thick gas/stellar disk or a (non)-uniform stellar/dark sphere with or without a boundary, and about the ''subtle distinctions'' among the kinetic energies from the local
Circular rotation speed , radial infall speed
, globally isotropic or anisotropic random motion
in one or three directions, or the (non)-uniform isotropic
Sound speed to ''emphasize of the logic'' behind the order of magnitude of the friction time scale.
Second we can with high confidence recap or ''very loosely summarise'' the various processes so far of collisional and collisionless gas/star or dark matter by
Spherical cow
Comic of a spherical cow as illustrated by a 1996 meeting of the American Astronomical Association, in reference to astronomy modeling
The spherical cow is a humorous metaphor for highly simplified scientific models of complex phenomena. Origi ...
style ''Continuity Equation on any generic quantity Q'' of the system:
where the
sign is generally negative except for the (accreting) mass M, and the
Mean free path
In physics, mean free path is the average distance over which a moving particle (such as an atom, a molecule, or a photon) travels before substantially changing its direction or energy (or, in a specific context, other properties), typically as a ...
or the friction time
can be due to direct molecular viscosity from a physical collision
Cross section, or due to gravitational scattering (bending/focusing/
Sling shot) of particles; generally the influenced area is the greatest of the competing processes of
Bondi accretion
In astrophysics, the Bondi accretion (also called Bondi–Hoyle–Lyttleton accretion), named after Hermann Bondi, is spherical accretion onto a compact object traveling through the interstellar medium. It is generally used in the context of neutro ...
,
Tidal disruption
The tidal force is a gravitational effect that stretches a body along the line towards the center of mass of another body due to a gradient (difference in strength) in gravitational field from the other body; it is responsible for diverse phenome ...
, and
Loss cone capture,
E.g., in case Q is the perturber's mass
, then we can estimate the
Dynamical friction time via the (gas/star) Accretion rate
where we have applied the relations motion-balancing-gravity.
In the limit the perturber is just 1 of the N background particle,
, this friction time is identified with the (gravitational)
Relaxation time. Again all
Coulomb logarithm A Coulomb collision is a binary elastic collision between two charged particles interacting through their own electric field. As with any inverse-square law, the resulting trajectories of the colliding particles is a hyperbolic Keplerian orbit. This ...
etc are suppressed without changing the estimations from these qualitative equations.
For the rest of Stellar dynamics, we will consistently work on ''precise'' calculations through primarily ''Worked Examples'', by neglecting gravitational friction and relaxation of the perturber, working in the limit
as approximated true in most galaxies on the 14Gyrs Hubble time scale, even though this is sometimes violated for some clusters of stars or clusters of galaxies.of the cluster.
A concise 1-page summary of some main equations in Stellar dynamics and
Accretion disc physics are shown here, where one attempts to be more rigorous on the qualitative equations above.
Connections to statistical mechanics and plasma physics
The statistical nature of stellar dynamics originates from the application of the
kinetic theory of gases
Kinetic (Ancient Greek: κίνησις “kinesis”, movement or to move) may refer to:
* Kinetic theory, describing a gas as particles in random motion
* Kinetic energy
In physics, the kinetic energy of an object is the energy that it ...
to stellar systems by physicists such as
James Jeans
Sir James Hopwood Jeans (11 September 187716 September 1946) was an English physicist, astronomer and mathematician.
Early life
Born in Ormskirk, Lancashire, the son of William Tulloch Jeans, a parliamentary correspondent and author. Jeans w ...
in the early 20th century. The
Jeans equations, which describe the time evolution of a system of stars in a gravitational field, are analogous to
Euler's equations for an ideal fluid, and were derived from the
collisionless Boltzmann equation. This was originally developed by
Ludwig Boltzmann
Ludwig Eduard Boltzmann (; 20 February 1844 – 5 September 1906) was an Austrian physicist and philosopher. His greatest achievements were the development of statistical mechanics, and the statistical explanation of the second law of thermod ...
to describe the non-equilibrium behavior of a thermodynamic system. Similarly to statistical mechanics, stellar dynamics make use of distribution functions that encapsulate the information of a stellar system in a probabilistic manner. The single particle phase-space distribution function,
, is defined in a way such that
where
represents the probability of finding a given star with position
around a differential volume
and velocity
around a differential velocity space volume
. The distribution function is normalized (sometimes) such that integrating it over all positions and velocities will equal N, the total number of bodies of the system. For collisional systems,
Liouville's theorem is applied to study the microstate of a stellar system, and is also commonly used to study the different statistical ensembles of statistical mechanics.
Convention and notation in case of a thermal distribution
In most of stellar dynamics literature, it is convenient to adopt the convention that the particle mass is unity in solar mass unit
, hence a particle's momentum and velocity are identical, i.e.,
For example, the thermal velocity distribution of air molecules (of typically 15 times the proton mass per molecule) in a room of constant temperature
would have a
Maxwell distribution
Maxwell may refer to:
People
* Maxwell (surname), including a list of people and fictional characters with the name
** James Clerk Maxwell, mathematician and physicist
* Justice Maxwell (disambiguation)
* Maxwell baronets, in the Baronetage of ...
where the energy per unit mass
where
and
is the width of the velocity Maxwell distribution, identical in each direction and everywhere in the room, and the normalisation constant
(assume the chemical potential
such that the Fermi-Dirac distribution reduces to a Maxwell velocity distribution) is fixed by the constant gas number density
at the floor level, where
The CBE
In plasma physics, the collisionless Boltzmann equation is referred to as the
Vlasov equation, which is used to study the time evolution of a plasma's distribution function.
The Boltzmann equation is often written more generally with the
Liouville operator as
where
is the gravitational force and
is the Maxwell (equipartition) distribution (to fit the same density, same mean and rms velocity as
). The equation means the non-Gaussianity will decay on a (relaxation) time scale of
, and the system will ultimately relaxes to a Maxwell (equipartition) distribution.
Whereas Jeans applied the collisionless Boltzmann equation, along with Poisson's equation, to a system of stars interacting via the long range force of gravity,
Anatoly Vlasov applied Boltzmann's equation with
Maxwell's equations
Maxwell's equations, or Maxwell–Heaviside equations, are a set of coupled partial differential equations that, together with the Lorentz force law, form the foundation of classical electromagnetism, classical optics, and electric circuits.
Th ...
to a system of particles interacting via the
Coulomb Force
Coulomb's inverse-square law, or simply Coulomb's law, is an experimental law of physics that quantifies the amount of force between two stationary, electrically charged particles. The electric force between charged bodies at rest is conventio ...
. Both approaches separate themselves from the kinetic theory of gases by introducing long-range forces to study the long term evolution of a many particle system. In addition to the Vlasov equation, the concept of
Landau damping In physics, Landau damping, named after its discoverer,Landau, L. "On the vibration of the electronic plasma". ''JETP'' 16 (1946), 574. English translation in ''J. Phys. (USSR)'' 10 (1946), 25. Reproduced in Collected papers of L.D. Landau, edited ...
in plasmas was applied to gravitational systems by
Donald Lynden-Bell to describe the effects of damping in spherical stellar systems.
A nice property of f(t,x,v) is that many other dynamical quantities can be formed by its
moments, e.g., the total mass, local density, pressure, and mean velocity. Applying the
collisionless Boltzmann equation, these moments are then related by various forms of continuity equations, of which most notable are the
Jeans equations and
Virial theorem
In mechanics, the virial theorem provides a general equation that relates the average over time of the total kinetic energy of a stable system of discrete particles, bound by potential forces, with that of the total potential energy of the system. ...
.
Probability-weighted moments and hydrostatic equilibrium
Jeans computed the weighted velocity of the Boltzmann Equation after integrating over velocity space
and obtain the Momentum (Jeans) Eqs. of a
opulation (e.g., gas, stars, dark matter):
The general version of Jeans equation, involving (3 x 3) velocity moments is cumbersome.
It only becomes useful or solvable if we could drop some of these moments, epecially drop the off-diagonal cross terms for systems of high symmetry, and also drop net rotation or net inflow speed everywhere.
The isotropic version is also called
Hydrostatic equilibrium
In fluid mechanics, hydrostatic equilibrium (hydrostatic balance, hydrostasy) is the condition of a fluid or plastic solid at rest, which occurs when external forces, such as gravity, are balanced by a pressure-gradient force. In the planetar ...
equation where balancing pressure gradient with gravity; the isotropic version works for axisymmetric disks as well, after replacing the derivative dr with vertical coordinate dz. It means that we could measure the gravity (of dark matter) by observing the gradients of the velocity dispersion and the number density of stars.
Applications and examples
Stellar dynamics is primarily used to study the mass distributions within stellar systems and galaxies. Early examples of applying stellar dynamics to clusters include
Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein ( ; ; 14 March 1879 – 18 April 1955) was a German-born theoretical physicist, widely acknowledged to be one of the greatest and most influential physicists of all time. Einstein is best known for developing the theor ...
's 1921 paper applying the
virial theorem
In mechanics, the virial theorem provides a general equation that relates the average over time of the total kinetic energy of a stable system of discrete particles, bound by potential forces, with that of the total potential energy of the system. ...
to spherical star clusters and
Fritz Zwicky's 1933 paper applying the virial theorem specifically to the
Coma Cluster, which was one of the original harbingers of the idea of
dark matter
Dark matter is a hypothetical form of matter thought to account for approximately 85% of the matter in the universe. Dark matter is called "dark" because it does not appear to interact with the electromagnetic field, which means it does not ab ...
in the universe. The Jeans equations have been used to understand different observational data of stellar motions in the Milky Way galaxy. For example,
Jan Oort utilized the Jeans equations to determine the average matter density in the vicinity of the solar neighborhood, whereas the concept of asymmetric drift came from studying the Jeans equations in cylindrical coordinates.
Stellar dynamics also provides insight into the structure of galaxy formation and evolution. Dynamical models and observations are used to study the triaxial structure of elliptical galaxies and suggest that prominent spiral galaxies are created from
galaxy mergers. Stellar dynamical models are also used to study the evolution of active galactic nuclei and their black holes, as well as to estimate the mass distribution of dark matter in galaxies.
A unified thick disk potential
Consider an oblate potential in cylindrical coordinates
where
are (positive) vertical and radial length scales.
Despite its complexity, we can easily see some limiting properties of the model.
First we can see the total mass of the system is
because
when we take the large radii limit
, so that
We can also show that some special cases of this unified potential become the potential of the Kuzmin razor-thin disk, that of the Point mass
, and that of a uniform-Needle mass distribution:
A worked example of gravity vector field in a thick disk
First consider the vertical gravity at the boundary,
Note that both the potential and the vertical gravity are continuous across the boundaries, hence no razor disk at the boundaries.
Thanks to the fact that at the boundary,
is continuous. Apply Gauss's theorem by integrating the vertical force over the entire disk upper and lower boundaries, we have
confirming that
takes the meaning of the total disk mass.
The vertical gravity drops with
at large radii, which is enhanced over the vertical gravity of a point mass
due to the self-gravity of the thick disk.
Density of a thick disk from Poisson Equation
Insert in the cylindrical Poisson eq.
which drops with radius, and is zero beyond
and uniform along the z-direction within the boundary.
Surface density and mass of a thick disk
Integrating over the entire thick disc of uniform thickness
, we find the surface density and the total mass as
This confirms that the absence of extra razor thin discs at the boundaries. In the limit,
, this thick disc potential reduces to that of a razor-thin Kuzmin disk, for which we can verify
.
Oscillation frequencies in a thick disk
To find the vertical and radial oscillation frequencies, we do a Taylor expansion of potential around the midplane.
and we find the circular speed
and the vertical and radial epicycle frequencies to be given by
Interestingly the rotation curve
is solid-body-like near the centre
, and is Keplerian far away.
At large radii three frequencies satisfy
.
E.g., in the case that
and
, the oscillations
forms a resonance.
In the case that
, the density is zero everywhere except uniform needle between
along the z-axis.
If we further require
, then we recover a well-known property for closed ellipse orbits in point mass potential,
A worked example for neutrinos in galaxies
For example, the phase space distribution function of non-relativistic neutrinos of mass m anywhere will not exceed the maximum value set by
where the Fermi-Dirac statistics says there are at most 6 flavours of neutrinos within a volume
and a velocity volume
.
Let's approximate the distribution is at maximum, i.e.,
where
such that
, respectively, is the potential energy of at the centre or the edge of the gravitational bound system. The corresponding neutrino mass density, assume spherical, would be
which reduces to
Take the simple case
, and estimate the density at the centre
with an escape speed
, we have
Clearly eV-scale neutrinos with
is too light to make up the 100–10000 over-density in galaxies with escape velocity
, while
neutrinos in clusters with
could make up
times cosmic background density.
By the way the freeze-out cosmic neutrinos in your room have a non-thermal random momentum
, and do not follow a Maxwell distribution, and are not in thermal equilibrium with the air molecules because of the extremely low cross-section of neutrino-baryon interactions.
A Recap on Harmonic Motions in Uniform Sphere Potential
Consider building a steady state model of the fore-mentioned uniform sphere of density
and potential
where
is the speed to escape to the edge
.
First a recap on motion "inside" the uniform sphere potential.
Inside this constant density core region, individual stars go on resonant harmonic oscillations of angular frequency
with
Loosely speaking our goal is to put stars on a weighted distribution of orbits with various energies
, i.e., the phase space density or distribution function, such that their overall stellar number density reproduces the constant core, hence their collective "steady-state" potential. Once this is reached, we call the system is a self-consistent equilibrium.
Example on Jeans theorem and CBE on Uniform Sphere Potential
Generally for a time-independent system, Jeans theorem predicts that
is an implicit function of the position and velocity through a functional dependence on "constants of motion".
For the uniform sphere, a solution for the Boltzmann Equation, written in spherical coordinates
and its velocity components
is
where
is a normalisation constant, which has the dimension of (mass) density. And we define a (positive enthalpy-like dimension
) Quantity
Clearly anti-clockwise rotating stars with
are excluded.
It is easy to see in spherical coordinates that
Insert the potential and these definitions of the orbital energy E and angular momentum J and its z-component Jz along every stellar orbit, we have
which implies
, and
between zero and
.
To verify the above
being constants of motion in our spherical potential, we note
for any "steady state" potential.
which reduces to
around the z-axis of any axisymmetric potential, where
.
Likewise the x and y components of the angular momentum are also conserved for a spherical potential. Hence
.
So for any time-independent spherical potential (including our uniform sphere model),
the orbital energy E and angular momentum J and its z-component Jz along every stellar orbit satisfy
Hence using the chain rule, we have
i.e.,
, so that CBE is satisfied, i.e., our
is a solution to the Collisionless Boltzmann Equation for our static spherical potential.
A worked example on moments of distribution functions in a uniform spherical cluster
We can find out various moments of the above distribution function, reformatted as with the help of three Heaviside functions,
once we input the expression for the earlier potential
inside
, or even better the speed to "escape from r to the edge"
of a uniform sphere
Clearly the factor
in the DF (distribution function) is well-defined only if
, which implies a narrow range on radius