ThreeDimensionalConfigurations/Stability/RiemannEllipsoids: Difference between revisions

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<li>{{ Ou2006 }}</li>
<li>{{ Ou2006 }}</li>
<li>[https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2007ApJ...665.1074O/abstract S. Ou, J. E. Tohline, &amp; P. M. Motl (2007, ApJ, Vol. 665, pp. 1074 - 1083)] titled, ''Further Evidence for an Elliptical Instability in Rotating Fluid Bars and Ellipsoidal Stars.''</li>
<li>[https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2007ApJ...665.1074O/abstract S. Ou, J. E. Tohline, &amp; P. M. Motl (2007, ApJ, Vol. 665, pp. 1074 - 1083)] titled, ''Further Evidence for an Elliptical Instability in Rotating Fluid Bars and Ellipsoidal Stars.''</li>
<li>[https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1974ApJ...190..121L/abstract N. R. Lebovitz (1974, ApJ, 190, 121 - 130)] titled, ''The Fission Theory of Binary Stars. II. Stability to Third-Harmonics Disturbances''</li>
<li>[https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1989GApFD..46..221L/abstract N. R. Lebovitz (1989a, Geophysical and Astrophysical Fluid Dynamics, Vol. 46, Issue 4, pp. 221 - 243)] titled, ''The Stability Equations for Rotating, Inviscid Fluids: &nbsp; Galerkin Methods and Orthogonal Bases''</li>
<li>[https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1989GApFD..47..225L/abstract N. R. Lebovitz (1989b, Geophysical and Astrophysical Fluid Dynamics, Vol. 47, Issue 1, pp. 225 - 236)] titled, ''Lagrangian Perturbations of Riemann Ellipsoids''</li>
</ul>
</ul>




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Revision as of 20:49, 23 January 2022


Lebovitz & Lifschitz (1996)

Lebovitz & Lifschitz
(1996)

Here we review the work of 📚 N. R. Lebovitz, & A. Lifschitz (1996, ApJ, Vol. 458, pp. 699 - 713) titled, "New Global Instabilities of the Riemann Ellipsoids," and discuss various extensions that have been made to this work. Note that a good summary of the research efforts that preceded (and inspired) the work of 📚 Lebovitz & Lifschitz (1996) can be found in the introductory section of S. Ou, J. E. Tohline, & P. M. Motl (2007, ApJ, Vol. 665, pp. 1074 - 1083).

We were prompted to tackle this review in response to an email received in December 2021 from Howard S. Cohl.  
 

Background

In Figure 1, the abscissa is the ratio b/a of semiaxes in the equatorial plane, and the ordinate is the ratio c/a of the vertical semiaxis to the larger of the equatorial semi axes. This diagram shows what 📚 Lebovitz & Lifschitz (1996) — hereafter, LL96 — refer to as "the horn-shaped region of existence of S-type ellipsoids and the Jacobi family;" it underpins all four panels of the LL96 Figure 2.

Figure 1: The Horn-Shaped Region of S-type Ellipsoids

EFE Diagram02

  • Jacobi sequence — the smooth curve that runs through the set of small, dark-blue, diamond-shaped markers; the data identifying the location of these markers have been drawn from §39, Table IV of [EFE]. The small red circular markers lie along this same sequence; their locations are taken from our own determinations, as detailed in Table 2 of our accompanying discussion of Jacobi ellipsoids. All of the models along this sequence have fζ/Ωf=0 and are therefore solid-body rotators, that is, there is no internal motion when the configuration is viewed from a frame that is rotating with frequency, Ωf.
  • Dedekind sequence — a smooth curve that lies precisely on top of the Jacobi sequence. Each configuration along this sequence is adjoint to a model on the Jacobi sequence that shares its (b/a, c/a) axis-ratio pair. All ellipsoidal figures along this sequence have 1/f=Ωf/ζ=0 and are therefore stationary as viewed from the inertial frame; the angular momentum of each configuration is stored in its internal motion (vorticity).
  • The X = -1 self-adjoint sequence — At every point along this sequence, the value of the key frequency ratio, ζ/Ωf, in the adjoint configuration (f+) is identical to the value of the frequency ratio in the direct configuration (f); specifically, f+=f=(a2+b2)/(ab). The data identifying the location of the small, solid-black markers along this sequence have been drawn from §48, Table VI of [EFE].
  • The X = +1 self-adjoint sequence — At every point along this sequence, the value of the key frequency ratio, ζ/Ωf, in the adjoint configuration (f+) is identical to the value of the frequency ratio in the direct configuration (f); specifically, f+=f=+(a2+b2)/(ab). The data identifying the location of the small, solid-black markers along this sequence have been drawn from §48, Table VI of [EFE].

EFE Diagram identifying example models from Ou (2006)

Riemann S-type ellipsoids all lie between or on the two (self-adjoint) curves marked "X = -1" and "X = +1" in the EFE Diagram. The yellow circular markers in the diagram shown here, on the left, identify four Riemann S-type ellipsoids that were examined by 📚 S. Ou (2006, ApJ, Vol. 639, pp. 549 - 558) and that we have also chosen to use as examples.

Four example models of equilibrium Riemann S-Type ellipsoids (click each parameter-pair to go to a related chapter discussion):

 
 
 

See Also


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