Appendix/Ramblings/T3CharacteristicVector

From jetwiki
Revision as of 12:27, 23 July 2021 by Jet53man (talk | contribs) (Created page with "__FORCETOC__ <!-- __NOTOC__ will force TOC off --> =Characteristic Vector for T3 Coordinates= Let's apply Jay's User:Jaycall/KillingVectorApproach|Characteristic Vector ap...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search


Characteristic Vector for T3 Coordinates

Let's apply Jay's Characteristic Vector approach to Joel's T3 Coordinate System.

Brute Force Manipulations

Starting from Equation CV.02, and plugging in expressions for various logarithmic derivatives of the T3 scale factors, we obtain [Note: Sign error from equation CV.02 fixed here on 15 July 2010],

 

C˙2C2(dlnλ2dt)1

=

(h1λ˙1h2λ˙2)2lnh1lnλ2+lnh2lnλ2

 

 

=

(h1λ˙1h2λ˙2)2(qh1h2λ2λ1)2(qh12)2

 

 

=

[(h1λ˙1)2(qh1h2λ2)2(h2λ˙2)2(qh12λ1)2](h2λ1λ˙2)2

 

 

=

[(λ˙1λ1)2(λ˙2λ2)2](qh12h2λ1λ2)2(h2λ1λ˙2)2

 

 

=

[λ˙1λ1+λ˙2λ2][λ˙1λ1λ˙2λ2](qh12λ2λ˙2)2

   

C˙2C2(dlnλ2dt)

=

[λ˙1λ1+λ˙2λ2][λ˙1λ1λ˙2λ2](qh12)2

 

 

=

[λ˙1λ1+λ˙2λ2]dlnh2dt

 

 

=

[dln(λ1λ2)dt]dlnh2dt

Two Views of Equation of Motion

Christoffel Symbol Formalism

The second component of the equation of motion can be obtained by setting i=2 and Ci=1 in Equation CV.01, specifically,

d(h22λ˙2)dt

=

hk2Γ2jkλ˙jλ˙k

=h12λ˙1[Γ211λ˙1+Γ221λ˙2]+h22λ˙2[Γ212λ˙1+Γ222λ˙2]

 

=

h12λ˙1[(1h1h1λ2)λ˙1(h2h12h2λ1)λ˙2]+h22λ˙2[(1h2h2λ1)λ˙1+(1h2h2λ2)λ˙2]

 

=

(h1h1λ2)λ˙12+(h2h2λ2)λ˙22


Binney and Tremaine Formalism

We have also derived the second component of the equation of motion following the formalism outlined by Binney and Tremaine (BT87). Specifically, in our introductory discussion of the T3 Coordinate System our Equation EOM.01 has the form,

d(h2λ˙2)dt

=

(λ2λ˙1λ1)dh2dt.

To compare this with the form derived using the Christoffel symbol formalism, we need to multiply through by h2 and bring the scale factor inside the time-derivative on the left-hand-side.

d(h22λ˙2)dt

=

[(h2λ2λ˙1λ1)+(h2λ˙2)]dh2dt

 

=

[(h2λ2λ˙1λ1)+(h2λ˙2)][h2λ1λ˙1+h2λ2λ˙2]

=

[(h2λ2λ˙1λ1)+(h2λ˙2)][λ2λ1λ˙1+λ˙2]h2λ2

 

=

[λ˙2+λ2λ1λ˙1][λ˙2λ2λ1λ˙1]h2h2λ2

=

[λ˙22(λ2λ1)2λ˙12]h2h2λ2

 

=

(h2h2λ2)λ˙22[h2λ22λ12λ˙12][h1λ12h2λ22h1λ2]

=

(h2h2λ2)λ˙22+(h1h1λ2)λ˙12

Summary

So we see that, indeed, the two formalisms produce identical forms of the equation of motion.


Implications

Backing up to the expression that began our examination of the Binney and Tremaine formalism, we also can write,

dln(h22λ˙2)dt

=

λ2λ˙2[λ˙1λ1+λ˙2λ2]dlnh2dt

    

dln(h22λ˙2)dt(dlnλ2dt)

=

[dln(λ1λ2)dt]dlnh2dt


NOTE:The following few boxed-in sentences/expressions are incorrect. They originally appeared in this discussion due to confusion that arose in conjunction with a sign error in the expression for dlnC2/dt (see the top of this page). On 14 July 2010, following a lengthy discussion between Joel and Jay of the statements colored in green, Jay spotted the sign error. (See his 14 July 2010 talk-page comment.) The proper derivation/conclusion resulting from the corrected sign error follows these boxed-in sentences/expressions.

Comparing this with the brute force derivation of the condition derived above for the characteristic vector, C2, we see that the two expressions are the same if we set,

C2=h22λ˙2.

This seems to imply that we have discovered a conserved quantity, namely, (h22λ˙2)2. On the other hand, I might just be using a circular argument; I might only be saying that "the equation of motion is the equation of motion!"

Temp note (from Jay): Joel, I don't quite understand this. Next time we get together, can you explain this page to me?


Comparing this last differential equation with the brute force derivation of the condition derived above for the characteristic vector, C2, we see that the two expressions are the same if we set,

C2=(h22λ˙2)1.

At first sight, this seems to imply that we have discovered a conserved quantity. But, alas, the result is a trivial one: The resulting conserved quantity is, C2(h22λ˙2)=1.

Conserved Quantity

Let's cut to the chase. As shown on the page describing the characteristic vector approach, I can write down the third conserved quantity right now--just not in closed form. Assuming there's no potential variation in the direction of λ2, it is

mh22λ2˙exp{hk2h22Γ2jkλj˙λk˙λ2˙ dt}.

In the case of T3 coordinates, this becomes more specific.

mh22λ2˙exp{2λ124(λ2λ1˙2λ2˙λ2˙λ12λ2)dt}

Although this is not all that useful in an analytic sense until we can integrate it, I wonder if it can be a guide to building a more accurate numerical model. Certainly this function can be integrated numerically, and that's got to be useful somehow...

Thoughts on Integrating This Conserved Quantity

The quantity appearing inside the parentheses has an interesting symmetry. Each variable appearing without a dot in the first term appears in the same place with a dot in the second term, and vice versa. Certainly there must be some differentiation rule that will allow us to express this quantity as a total time derivative.

On the other hand, the factor of λ2˙ appearing in the denominator of the first term is troublesome. I can't think of any differentiation rule that puts a derivative in the denominator. Product rule, quotient rule, and chain rule all end up multiplying by derivatives. So I wonder if there's some way to eliminate the λ2˙ in favor of undotted variables. This would require transforming the equation of motion for the λ2˙ coordinate into a first-order equation. Right now, the second-order equation reads

λ2¨+h2˙h2λ2˙λ1˙h2˙λ1h2λ2=0.

The first step in reducing this to a first-order equation is to perform a transformation of variables that eliminates that λ2˙ term. I have successfully accomplished this. By defining bh21/2λ2, the equation can be written:

b¨+(14h2˙2h212h2¨h2λ1˙h2˙λ1h2)b=0.

Tiled Menu

Appendices: | VisTrailsEquations | VisTrailsVariables | References | Ramblings | VisTrailsImages | myphys.lsu | ADS |