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Self-Gravitating Systems
Self-Gravitating Systems: Characteristics
The gravitational N-body problem, a system of point masses moving
under purely gravitational forces, poses a large number of challenges
in mathematical physics, notwithstanding the simplicity with which the
problem can be formulated. The absence of intrinsic length scales in
Newtonian dynamics implies that singularities occur both at infinitely
small distances between particles as well as at infinitely large
separations. In high-energy physics, these singularities would be
called ultraviolet and infrared divergencies, respectively. Here I
list three areas of research in self-gravitating systems in which I
have made some contributions.
Topology
Since the two-body system can be solved analytically, the three-body
problem is the simplest unsolved version of a self-gravitating system.
Until electronic computers became available, work on the three-body
problem was limited to the search for periodic orbits, and the
derivation of perturbation expansions for applications to planetary
orbits. When computers finally gave us a (virtual) laboratory, we
could start to conduct
gravitational
scattering experiments. Apart from giving us quantitative
information about the energy budgets of star clusters, these
experiments also exhibited a variety of intriguing qualitative
features, which I charted and analyzed in the paper
A rather different example of the use of qualitative as well as
quantitative techniques in the study of self-gravitating systems, in
the limit of very large particle numbers, can be found in our paper
Dynamical Instabilities
There are many examples known in stellar dynamics of equilibrium
configurations, for which the density distributions do not change in
time if the particles continue to follow their original orbits.
Constructing such configurations is an interesting problem in itself,
but determining their dynamical stability is more difficult. For the
simplest case, of spherical density distributions, we combined
numerical and analytic techniques in the paper:
There we confirmed the existence of a radial instability found
earlier, and we discovered two new nonradial instabilities.
Exponential Instability: Lyaponov Coefficients
A completely different type of instability can be found on a
`microscopic' level: if we perturb the orbit of even one particle in a
self-gravitating system ever so slightly, the perturbation will affect
the orbits of all other particles. These deviations will all grow
exponentially fast. Even for the three-body problem, this road to
chaos can be found in scattering experiments, as we described in our paper:
In the general gravitational N-body system, it turns out that the time
scale for exponential growth is of order of a fraction of the crossing
time, as we found in our paper:
A connection with two-body relaxation was established in the paper
-
Orbital Divergence and Relaxation in the Gravitational N-Body Problem,
by Hut, P. and Heggie, D.C., 2002, in the proceedings of the 84th
Statistical Mechanics Conference (to celebrate the 65th birthdays
of David Ruelle and Yasha Sinai), J. Stat. Phys xxx,
xxx-xxx (available in
preprint form as
astro-ph/0111015).
Long-Term Evolution
Most $N$-body simulations do not extend far beyond the point of
core-collapse. Following a system of self-gravitating point masses
all the way down to its final evaporation is computationally very
time-consuming. The presence of a tidal field will of course speed up
the evaporation considerably, but it also introduces extra free
parameters, and it complicates the theoretical analysis. The first
detailed exploration of the long-term behavior of isoltad evaporating
systems, without any tidal fields, was presented in
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