SSC/Structure/IsothermalSphere

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Isothermal Sphere

Isothermal
Sphere

Here we supplement the simplified set of principal governing equations with an isothermal equation of state, that is, P is related to ρ through the relation,

P=cs2ρ,

where, cs is the isothermal sound speed.  
 
 

Comparing this P-ρ relationship to

Form A
of the Ideal Gas Equation of State,

Pgas=μ¯ρT

we see that,

cs2=Tμ¯=kTmuμ¯,

where, , k, mu, and μ¯ are all defined in the accompanying variables appendix. It will be useful to note that, for an isothermal gas, the enthalpy, H, is related to ρ via the expression,

dH=dPρ=cs2dlnρ.


Governing Relations

Adopting solution technique #2, we need to solve the following second-order ODE relating the two unknown functions, ρ and H:

1r2ddr(r2dHdr)=4πGρ .

Using the H-ρ relationship for an isothermal gas presented above, this can be rewritten entirely in terms of the density as,

1r2ddr(r2dlnρdr)=4πGcs2ρ,

or, equivalently,

d2lnρdr2+2rdlnρdr+β2ρ=0,

where,

β24πGcs2.

This matches the governing ODE whose derivation was published on p. 131 of the book by 📚 Emden, R. 1907, Gaskugeln (Leipzig).

Derivation Appearing on p. 131 of 📚 Emden (1907) (edited)

Emden (1907)
Emden (1907)

§2. Wir gehen wieder aus von der Gleichung (59)

ddr(r2ρdpdr)=4πGρr2.

Da wir haben p=ρHT,T=konst., so ergibt sich

dpρ=HTdρρ=HTdlogρ,

und setzen wir

β2=4πGHT (gramm-1 cent)

und führen die Differentiation aus, so ergibt sich die

Differentialgleichung der isothermal Gaskugel
d2lgρdr2+2rdlgρr+β2ρ=0.

Note that, in Emden's derivation, H is not enthalpy but, rather, the effective gas constant, H=cs2/T.

By adopting the following dimensionless variables,

𝔯1ρc1/2βr,andv1ln(ρ/ρc),

where ρc is the configuration's central density, the governing ODE can be rewritten in dimensionless form as,

d2v1d𝔯12+2𝔯1dv1d𝔯1+ev1=0,

which is exactly the equation numbered (II"a) that can be found on p. 133 of 📚 Emden (1907). Emden numerically determined the behavior of the function v1(𝔯1), its first derivative with respect to 𝔯1, v1, along with ev1 and several other useful products, and published his results as Table 14, on p. 135 of his book. This table has been reproduced immediately below, primarily for historical purposes.

Note that a somewhat more extensive tabulation of the structural properties of isothermal spheres is provided by 📚 S. Chandrasekhar & G. W. Wares (1949, ApJ, Vol. 109, pp. 551 - 554). In this published work as well as in §22 of Chapter IV in [C67], Chandrasekhar has written the governing ODE in a form that we will refer to as the,

Isothermal Lane-Emden Equation

1ξ2ddξ(ξ2dψdξ)=eψ

It is straightforward to show that this is identical to Emden's governing expression after making the variable substitutions:

𝔯1ξ        and         v1ψ.

Across the astrophysics community, Chadrasekhar's notation has been widely — although not universally — adopted as the standard.

Emden's Numerical Solution

Emden's (1907) Table 14
Emden's (1907) Table 14

Note: The entry highlighted in blue in the 3rd column must be a typesetting error.

A more recent and more extensive tabulation of the structural properties of isothermal spheres is provided by:

An analytic — but approximate — solution to the isothermal Lane-Emden equation can be found:


A plot of v1 versus ln𝔯1, as shown below in Figure 1a, translates into a log-log plot of the equilibrium configuration's ρ(r) density profile. Notice that this isolated isothermal configuration extends to infinity and that, at large radii, the density profile displays a simple power-law behavior — specifically, ρr2. This is consistent with our general discussion, presented elsewhere, of power-law density distributions as solutions of the Lane-Emden equation.


Figure 1: Emden's Numerical Solution

Plotted from Emden's (1907) tabulated data
Plotted from Emden's (1907) tabulated data
Plotted from Emden's (1907) tabulated data
Plotted from Emden's (1907) tabulated data

(a) The (x,y) locations of the data points plotted in blue are drawn directly from column 1 and column 3 of Emden's Table 14 — specifically, x=ln(𝔯1) and y=v1. The dashed red line has a slope of 2 and serves to illustrate that, at large radii, the isothermal density profile tends toward a ρr2 distribution.

(b) The (x,y) locations of the data points plotted in purple are drawn directly from column 1 and column 7 of Emden's Table 14 — specifically, x=ln(𝔯1) and y=𝔯12v1. The dashed green line has a slope of +1 and serves to illustrate that, at large radii, the isothermal M(r) distribution tends toward a Mrr distribution.

Mass Profile

The mass enclosed within a given radius, Mr, can be determined by performing an appropriate volume-weighted integral over the density distribution. Specifically, based on the key expression for,

Mass Conservation

dMrdr=4πr2ρ

in spherically symmetric configurations, the relevant integral is,

Mr=0r4πr2ρ(r)dr.

But Mr also can be determined from the information provided in column 7 of Emden's Table 14 — that is, from knowledge of the first derivative of v1. The appropriate expression can be obtained from the mathematical prescription for

Hydrostatic Balance

dPdr=GMrρr2

in a spherically symmetric configuration. Since, for an isothermal equation of state (see above),

dPρ=cs2dlnρ,

the statement of hydrostatic balance can be rewritten as,

Mr=cs2G[r2dlnρdr]=cs2Gρc1/2β[𝔯12dv1d𝔯1]=(cs64πG3ρc)1/2[𝔯12v1].

The quantity tabulated in column 7 of Emden's Table 14 is precisely the dimensionless term inside the square brackets of this last expression; having units of mass, the coefficient out front sets the mass scale of the equilibrium configuration and depends only on the choice of central density and isothermal sound speed. Hence, a plot of ln(𝔯12v1) versus ln𝔯1, as shown above in Figure 1b, translates into a log-log plot of the equilibrium configuration's Mr mass profile. Notice that, along with the radius, the mass of this isolated isothermal configuration extends to infinity and that, at large radii, the mass profile displays a simple power-law behavior — specifically, Mrr+1.

As was realized independently by 📚 R. Ebert (1955, Zeitschrift für Astrophysik, Vol. 37, pp. 217 - 232) and 📚 W. B. Bonnor (1956, MNRAS, Vol. 116, pp. 351 - 359), a spherically symmetric isothermal equilibrium configuration of finite radius and finite mass can be constructed if the system is embedded in a pressure-confining external medium. We discuss their findings elsewhere.

Summary

Based on the above derivations, the internal structural properties of an equilibrium isothermal sphere can be described in terms of the tabulated quantities provided in Emden's Table 14 as follows:

  • Radial Coordinate Position:
Given the isothermal sound speed, cs, and the central density, ρc, the radial coordinate is,

r=(ρcβ2)1/2𝔯1=(cs24πGρc)1/2𝔯1 .

  • Density & Pressure:
As a function of the radial coordinate, r(𝔯1), the density profile is,

ρ(r(𝔯1))=ρcev1(𝔯1);

and the pressure profile is,

P(r(𝔯1))=(cs2ρc)ev1(𝔯1).

As has been explicitly pointed out in the above discussion associated with Figure 1a, the density profile — and, hence, also the pressure profile — extends to infinity and, at large radii, behaves as a power law; specifically, ρr2.
  • Mass:
Given cs and ρc, the natural mass scale is,

M0(cs64πG3ρc)1/2 ;

and, expressed in terms of M0, the mass that lies interior to radius r is,

Mr=M0[𝔯12v1].

As discussed above in the context of Figure 1b, at large radii, the mass increases linearly with r. Because the density and pressure profiles extend to infinity, this means that the mass of an isolated isothermal sphere is infinite.
  • Enthalpy & Gravitational Potential:
To within an additive constant, the enthalpy distribution is,

H(r(𝔯1))=cs2[v1(𝔯1)];

and the gravitational potential is,

Φ(r(𝔯1))=H(r(𝔯1))=cs2v1(𝔯1).

  • Mean-to-Local Density Ratio:
The ratio of the configuration's mean density, inside a given radius, to its local density at that radius is,

ρ¯ρ=3Mr4πr3ρ=3[v1𝔯1ev1] .

As Figure 2 shows, at large r this density ratio goes to the value of 3, which means that the term inside the square brackets goes to unity at large r. This behavior is consistent with the limiting power-law behavior of both Mr and ρ, discussed above.

Figure 2: From Emden's Tabulated Data

Plot based on data from Emden's (1907) Table 14
Plot based on data from Emden's (1907) Table 14

The blue curve displays an evaluation of the density ratio, [3v1/(𝔯1ev1)], as a function of ln(𝔯1), as determined from the data presented in Emden's Table 14, shown above.

Our Numerical Integration

via
Direct
Numerical
Integration

The above governing relation — see especially Chandrasekhar's notation — may be rewritten as (see also, for example, §19.8, eq. 19.35 of [KW94]),

d2wdr2+2rdwdr

=

ew,

where we appreciate that,

wln(ρρc).

We'll adopt the following finite-difference approximations for the first and second derivatives on a grid of radial spacing, Δr:

wi

w+w2Δr

and,

wi

w+2wi+wΔr2.

Our finite-difference approximation of the governing equation is, then,

ri[w+2wi+wΔr2]+2[w+w2Δr]

=

riewi

ri[w+2wi+w]+Δr[w+w]

=

Δr2riewi

w+

=

Δr2riewi+2riwi+w(Δrri)(Δr+ri).

Now, for the first two steps away from the center — where, wi=w0=0 and ri=r0=0 — we will use the following power-series expansion (see, for example, eq. 377 from §22 in Chapter IV of [C67]) to determine the value of wi:

w1

=

Δr26Δr4120+Δr61890,

and,

w2

=

(2Δr)26(2Δr)4120+(2Δr)61890.

Related Discussions

Journal Articles

  • J. H. Lane (1870), American Journal of Science, On the Theoretical Temperature of the Sun
  • J. H. Lane (1870), The American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol. 50, pp. 57 - 74: On the Theoretical Temperature of the Sun under the Hypothesis of a Gaseous Mass Maintaining Its Volume by Its Internal Heat and Depending on the Laws of Gases Known to Terrestrial Experiment

Wikipedia


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