Changes between Version 8 and Version 9 of u/erica/RadHydro


Ignore:
Timestamp:
03/29/16 19:30:20 (9 years ago)
Author:
Erica Kaminski
Comment:

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  • u/erica/RadHydro

    v8 v9  
    4141''' Jeans unstable gas '''
    4242
    43 Imagine starting with a uniform, Jeans unstable gas mass. Initially it is in radiative equilibrium, but on a freefall timescale, the gas will begin to collapse -- becoming denser and hotter as it does (recall equation for internal energy has a gravitational energy term). This will lead to regions in the grid where 4piB>cE. This will will increase the radiative energy field, and thus act to 'cool' the gas (as Erad increases, e decreases). Is this right? Thinking of radiation as a source of cooling for optically thin gas...?
     43Imagine now starting with a uniform, Jeans unstable gas mass. Initially it is in radiative equilibrium, but on a freefall timescale, the gas will begin to collapse -- becoming denser and hotter as it does (recall equation for internal energy has a gravitational energy term). This will lead to regions in the grid where 4piB>cE. This will increase the radiative energy field,
     44
     45[[latex($\frac{\partial E}{\partial t} \propto (4 \pi B - cE) > 0$)]]
     46
     47and thus act to 'cool' the gas (as Erad increases, e decreases):
     48
     49[[latex($\frac{\partial \rho e}{\partial t} = -\kappa (4\pi B- cE)<0$)]]
     50
     51(Is this right? Thinking of radiation as a source of cooling for optically thin gas...? Seems natural..)
     52
     53Now in the next timestep this energy could either diffuse away, or stick around, depending on how optically thick the gas is (controlled by [[latex($\kappa_R$)]]).
     54
     55If the diffusion term is larger than the coupling term (which acts to increase Erad over the course of the infall by the conversion of gravitational energy into heat), 
     56
     57[[latex($\frac{\partial E}{\partial t} \propto \nabla \cdot \nabla E + (4 \pi B - cE)$)]],
     58
     59then,
     60
     61[[latex($\frac{\partial \rho e}{\partial t} = -\kappa (4\pi B- cE)<0$)]]
     62
     63
    4464
    4565Eventually the material should become dense enough that is becomes optically thick to the radiation. Thus, despite the gas heating up through infall, it should no longer be adding these photons to the radiation field (for if it does, it will continue to cool given the equations are inverses of each other)...? We can imagine the