1 research outputs found
Equilibrium configurations of fluids and their stability in higher dimensions
We study equilibrium shapes, stability and possible bifurcation diagrams of
fluids in higher dimensions, held together by either surface tension or
self-gravity. We consider the equilibrium shape and stability problem of
self-gravitating spheroids, establishing the formalism to generalize the
MacLaurin sequence to higher dimensions. We show that such simple models, of
interest on their own, also provide accurate descriptions of their general
relativistic relatives with event horizons. The examples worked out here hint
at some model-independent dynamics, and thus at some universality: smooth
objects seem always to be well described by both ``replicas'' (either
self-gravity or surface tension). As an example, we exhibit an instability
afflicting self-gravitating (Newtonian) fluid cylinders. This instability is
the exact analogue, within Newtonian gravity, of the Gregory-Laflamme
instability in general relativity. Another example considered is a
self-gravitating Newtonian torus made of a homogeneous incompressible fluid. We
recover the features of the black ring in general relativity.Comment: 42 pages, 11 Figures, RevTeX4. Accepted for publication in Classical
and Quantum Gravity. v2: Minor corrections and references adde