6 research outputs found
Viscosity in spherically symmetric accretion
The influence of viscosity on the flow behaviour in spherically symmetric
accretion, has been studied here. The governing equation chosen has been the
Navier-Stokes equation. It has been found that at least for the transonic
solution, viscosity acts as a mechanism that detracts from the effectiveness of
gravity. This has been conjectured to set up a limiting scale of length for
gravity to bring about accretion, and the physical interpretation of such a
length-scale has been compared with the conventional understanding of the
so-called "accretion radius" for spherically symmetric accretion. For a
perturbative presence of viscosity, it has also been pointed out that the
critical points for inflows and outflows are not identical, which is a
consequence of the fact that under the Navier-Stokes prescription, there is a
breakdown of the invariance of the stationary inflow and outflow solutions --
an invariance that holds good under inviscid conditions. For inflows, the
critical point gets shifted deeper within the gravitational potential well.
Finally, a linear stability analysis of the stationary inflow solutions, under
the influence of a perturbation that is in the nature of a standing wave, has
indicated that the presence of viscosity induces greater stability in the
system, than has been seen for the case of inviscid spherically symmetric
inflows.Comment: 7 pages. Minor changes made in the version published in MNRA
Realizability of stationary spherically symmetric transonic accretion
The spherically symmetric stationary transonic (Bondi) flow is considered a
classic example of an accretion flow. This flow, however, is along a
separatrix, which is usually not physically realizable. We demonstrate, using a
pedagogical example, that it is the dynamics which selects the transonic flow.Comment: 4 pages in REVTeX with 2 figures. Typos have been corrected and some
alterations have been made in the version published in Physical Review
Likelihood as a measure of uncertainty in system reliability and probabilistic safety assessment
4.00Available from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:9091.9F(SRD-R--443) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo