77 research outputs found

    The Newtonian potential of thin disks

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    The one-dimensional, ordinary differential equation (ODE) by Hur\'e & Hersant (2007) that satisfies the midplane gravitational potential of truncated, flat power-law disks is extended to the whole physical space. It is shown that thickness effects (i.e. non-flatness) can be easily accounted for by implementing an appropriate "softening length" λ\lambda. The solution of this "softened ODE" has the following properties: i) it is regular at the edges (finite radial accelerations), ii) it possesses the correct long-range properties, iii) it matches the Newtonian potential of a geometrically thin disk very well, and iv) it tends continuously to the flat disk solution in the limit λ→0\lambda \rightarrow 0. As illustrated by many examples, the ODE, subject to exact Dirichlet conditions, can be solved numerically with efficiency for any given colatitude at second-order from center to infinity using radial mapping. This approach is therefore particularly well-suited to generating grids of gravitational forces in order to study particles moving under the field of a gravitating disk as found in various contexts (active nuclei, stellar systems, young stellar objects). Extension to non-power-law surface density profiles is straightforward through superposition. Grids can be produced upon request.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&

    Generation of potential/surface density pairs in flat disks Power law distributions

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    We report a simple method to generate potential/surface density pairs in flat axially symmetric finite size disks. Potential/surface density pairs consist of a ``homogeneous'' pair (a closed form expression) corresponding to a uniform disk, and a ``residual'' pair. This residual component is converted into an infinite series of integrals over the radial extent of the disk. For a certain class of surface density distributions (like power laws of the radius), this series is fully analytical. The extraction of the homogeneous pair is equivalent to a convergence acceleration technique, in a matematical sense. In the case of power law distributions, the convergence rate of the residual series is shown to be cubic inside the source. As a consequence, very accurate potential values are obtained by low order truncation of the series. At zero order, relative errors on potential values do not exceed a few percent typically, and scale with the order N of truncation as 1/N**3. This method is superior to the classical multipole expansion whose very slow convergence is often critical for most practical applications.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics 7 pages, 8 figures, F90-code available at http://www.obs.u-bordeaux1.fr/radio/JMHure/intro2applawd.htm

    Self-gravity at the scale of the polar cell

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    We present the exact calculus of the gravitational potential and acceleration along the symmetry axis of a plane, homogeneous, polar cell as a function of mean radius a, radial extension e, and opening angle f. Accurate approximations are derived in the limit of high numerical resolution at the geometrical mean of the inner and outer radii (a key-position in current FFT-based Poisson solvers). Our results are the full extension of the approximate formula given in the textbook of Binney & Tremaine to all resolutions. We also clarify definitely the question about the existence (or not) of self-forces in polar cells. We find that there is always a self-force at radius except if the shape factor a.f/e reaches ~ 3.531, asymptotically. Such cells are therefore well suited to build a polar mesh for high resolution simulations of self-gravitating media in two dimensions. A by-product of this study is a newly discovered indefinite integral involving complete elliptic integral of the first kind over modulus.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, A&A accepte

    A substitute for the singular Green kernel in the Newtonian potential of celestial bodies

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    The "point mass singularity" inherent in Newton's law for gravitation represents a major difficulty in accurately determining the potential and forces inside continuous bodies. Here we report a simple and efficient analytical method to bypass the singular Green kernel 1/|r-r'| inside the source without altering the nature of the interaction. We build an equivalent kernel made up of a "cool kernel", which is fully regular (and contains the long-range -GM/r asymptotic behavior), and the gradient of a "hyperkernel", which is also regular. Compared to the initial kernel, these two components are easily integrated over the source volume using standard numerical techniques. The demonstration is presented for three-dimensional distributions in cylindrical coordinates, which are well-suited to describing rotating bodies (stars, discs, asteroids, etc.) as commonly found in the Universe. An example of implementation is given. The case of axial symmetry is treated in detail, and the accuracy is checked by considering an exact potential/surface density pair corresponding to a flat circular disc. This framework provides new tools to keep or even improve the physical realism of models and simulations of self-gravitating systems, and represents, for some of them, a conclusive alternative to softened gravity.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A; 7 pages, color figure

    The global structure of thin, stratified "alpha"-discs and the reliability of the one layer approximation

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    We report the results of a systematic comparison between the vertically averaged model and the vertically explicit model of steady state, Keplerian, optically thick "alpha"-discs. The simulations have concerned discs currently found in three different systems: dwarf novae, young stellar objects and active galactic nuclei. In each case, we have explored four decades of accretion rates and almost the whole disc area (except the narrow region where the vertically averaged model has degenerate solutions). We find that the one layer approach gives a remarkably good estimate of the main physical quantities in the disc, and specially the temperature at the equatorial plane which is accurate to within 30% for cases considered. The major deviations (by a factor < 4) are observed on the disc half-thickness. The sensitivity of the results to the "alpha"-parameter value has been tested for 0.001 < alpha < 0.1 and appears to be weak. This study suggests that the ``precision'' of the vertically averaged model which is easy to implement should be sufficient in practice for many astrophysical applications.Comment: 4 pages, PostScript. Accepted in Astronomy & Astrophysic

    AGN disks and black holes on the weighting scales

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    We exploit our formula for the gravitational potential of finite size, power-law disks to derive a general expression linking the mass of the black hole in active galactic nuclei (AGN), the mass of the surrounding disk, its surface density profile (through the power index s), and the differential rotation law. We find that the global rotation curve v(R) of the disk in centrifugal balance does not obey a power law of the cylindrical radius R (except in the confusing case s = -2 that mimics a Keplerian motion), and discuss the local velocity index. This formula can help to understand how, from position-velocity diagrams, mass is shared between the disk and the black hole. To this purpose, we have checked the idea by generating a sample of synthetic data with different levels of Gaussian noise, added in radius. It turns out that, when observations are spread over a large radial domain and exhibit low dispersion (standard deviation less than 10% typically), the disk properties (mass and s-parameter) and black hole mass can be deduced from a non linear fit of kinematic data plotted on a (R, Rv 2)-diagram. For a deviation higher than 10%, masses are estimated fairly well from a linear regression (corresponding to the zeroth-order treatment of the formula), but the power index s is no longer accessible. We have applied the model to 7 AGN disks whose rotation has already been probed through water maser emission. For NGC3393 and UGC3789, the masses seem well constrained through the linear approach. For IC1481, the power-law exponent s can even be deduced. Because the model is scale-free, it applies to any kind of star/disk system. Extension to disks around young stars showing deviation from Keplerian motion is thus straightforward.Comment: accepted for publication in A&

    A new equation for the mid-plane potential of power law disks

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    We show that the gravitational potential in the plane of an axisymmetrical flat disk where the surface density varies as a power of the radius obeys an inhomogeneous first-order Ordinary Differential Equation (ODE) solvable by standard techniques. The potential being exactly known at the origin for any power index (and at infinity as well), the search for solutions consists of a Two-point Boundary Value Problem (TBVP) with Dirichlet conditions. The computating time is then linear with the number of grid points, instead of quadratic from direct summation methods. Complex mass distributions which can be decomposed into a mixture of power law surface density profiles are easily accessible through the superposition principle. This ODE definitively takes the place of the untractable bidimensional Poisson equation for planar calculations. It opens new horizons to investigate various aspects related to self-gravity in astrophysical disks (force calculations, stability analysis, etc.).Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in A&

    Origin of non-keplerian motions of masers in NGC 1068

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    We demonstrate that the ``sub-keplerian'' rotation curve of maser spots in NGC 1068 can be explained by the gravitational attraction of the disc orbiting the central black hole. Possible parameters matching observations are: black hole mass of 12 million solar masses, disc outer edge > 1.3 pc, aspect ratio in the range 0.003 to 0.3, surface density varying approximately as 1/R, and disc mass of about 9.4 million solar masses. The physical conditions required for the excitation of masers are fulfilled, and the outer disc would stand in a gravitationally marginally stable state.Comment: 4 pages; accepted in A&A Letter

    Nested spheroidal figures of equilibrium III. Connection with the gravitational moments J2nJ_{2n}

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    We establish, in the framework of the theory of nested figures, the expressions for the gravitational moments J2nJ_{2n} of a systems made of L{\cal L} homogeneous layers separated by spheroidal surfaces and in relative rotational motion. We then discuss how to solve the inverse problem, which consists in finding the equilibrium configurations (i.e. internal structures) that reproduce ``exactly'' a set of observables, namely the equatorial radius, the total mass, the shape and the first gravitational moments. Two coefficients J2nJ_{2n} being constrained per surface, L=1+n2{\cal L}=1+\frac{n}{2} layers (nn even) are required to fix J2J_2 to J2nJ_{2n}. As shown, this problem already suffers from a severe degeneracy, inherent in the fact that two spheroidal surfaces in the system confocal with each other leave unchanged all the moments. The complexity, which increases with the number of layers involved, can be reduced by considering the rotation rate of each layer. Jupiter is used as a test-bed to illustrate the method, concretely for L=2,3{\cal L}=2,3 and 44. For this planet, the number of possible internal structures is infinite for L>2{\cal L} > 2. Intermediate layers can have smaller or larger oblateness, and can rotate slower or faster than the surroundings. Configurations with large and massive cores are always present. Low-mass cores (of the order a few Earth masses) are predicted for L≥4{\cal L} \ge 4. The results are in good agreement with the numerical solutions obtained from the Self-Consistent-Field method.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 24 page

    A local prescription for the softening length in self-gravitating gaseous discs

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    In 2D-simulations of self-gravitating gaseous discs, the potential is often computed in the framework of "softened gravity" initially designed for N-body codes. In this special context, the role of the softening length LAMBDA is twofold: i) to avoid numerical singularities in the integral representation of the potential (i.e., arising when the relative separation vanishes), and ii) to acount for stratification of matter in the direction perpendicular to the disc mid-plane. So far, most studies have considered LAMBDA as a free parameter and various values or formulae have been proposed without much mathematical justification. In this paper, we demonstrate by means of a rigorous calculus that it is possible to define LAMBDA such that the gravitational potential of a flat disc coincides at order zero with that of a geometically thin disc of the same surface density. Our prescription for LAMBDA, valid in the local, axisymmetric limit, has the required properties i) and ii). It is mainly an analytical function of the radius and disc thickness, and is sensitive to the vertical stratification. For mass density profiles considered (namely, profiles expandable over even powers of the altitude), we find that LAMBDA : i) is independant of the numerical mesh, ii) is always a fraction of the local thickness H, iii) goes through a minimum at the singularity (i.e., at null separation), and iv) is such that 0.13 < LAMBDA/H < 0.29 typically (depending on the separation and on density profile). These results should help us to improve the quality of 2D- and 3D-simulations of gaseous discs in several respects (physical realism, accuracy, and computing time).Comment: accepted in A&A, 7 pages, 7 figures, web link for the F90 code and on-line calculations : http://www.obs.u-bordeaux1.fr/radio/JMHure/intro2single.ph
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