SSC/Structure/BiPolytropes/Analytic1.53

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BiPolytrope with (nc, ne) = (3/2, 3)[edit]


Part I:  Milne's (1930) EOS

 


Part II:  Point-Source Model

 


Part III:  Our Derivation

 


Milne
(1930)

Here we lay out the procedure for constructing a bipolytrope in which the core has an nc=32 polytropic index and the envelope has an ne=3 polytropic index. We will build our discussion around the work of 📚 E. A. Milne (1930, MNRAS, Vol. 91, pp. 4 - 55) who, as we shall see, justified these two indexes on physical grounds. While this system cannot be described by closed-form, analytic expressions, it is of particular interest because — as far as we have been able to determine — its examination by Milne represents the first "composite polytrope" to be discussed in the astrophysics literature.

In deriving the properties of this model, we will follow the general solution steps for constructing a bipolytrope that are outlined in a separate chapter of this H_Book. That group of general solution steps was drawn largely from chapter IV, §28 of Chandrasekhar's book titled, "An Introduction to the Study of Stellar Structure" [C67]. At the end of that chapter (specifically, p. 182), Chandrasekhar acknowledges that "[Milne's] method is largely used in § 28." It seems fitting, therefore, that we highlight the features of the specific bipolytropic configuration that 📚 Milne (1930) chose to build.

Milne's (1930) Choice of Equations of State[edit]

As has been detailed in our introductory discussion of analytically expressible equations of state and as is summarized in the following table, often the total gas pressure can be expressed as the sum of three separate components: a component of ideal gas pressure, a component of radiation pressure, and a component due to a degenerate electron gas. As a result, the total pressure is given by the expression,

P

=

Pgas+Pdeg+Prad.

Ideal Gas Degenerate Electron Gas Radiation

Pgas=μ¯ρT

Pdeg=AFF(χ)

where:  F(χ)χ(2χ23)(χ2+1)1/2+3sinh1χ

and:   

χ(ρ/BF)1/3

Prad=13aradT4


With this construction in mind, 📚 Milne (1930) also introduced the parameter, β, to define the ratio of gas pressure (meaning, ideal-gas plus degeneracy pressure) to total pressure, that is,

βPgas+PdegP,

in which case, also,

PradP=1β         and         Pgas+PdegPrad=β1β.


(We also have referenced this parameter, β, in the context of a broader discussion of equations of state and modeling time-dependent flows.)


Envelope[edit]

Now, inside the envelope of his composite polytrope, 📚 Milne (1930) considered that the effects of electron degeneracy pressure could be ignored and, accordingly, employed throughout the envelope the expression,

PgasPrad|env=β1β,

or (see Milne's equation 24),

(μe)ρ=13aradT3(β1β).

If the parameter, β, is constant throughout the envelope — which Milne assumes — then this last expression can be interpreted as defining a T(ρ) function throughout the envelope of the form,

T=[(μe)(1ββ)3arad]1/3ρ1/3.

Now, returning to the definition of β while ignoring the effects of degeneracy pressure, we recognize that the total pressure in the envelope can be written in the form of a modified ideal gas relation, namely,

βP=Pgas+Pdeg0=(μe)ρT,

with the specific T(ρ) behavior just derived. This allows us to write the envelope's total pressure as,

P

=

1β(μe)ρ[(μe)(1ββ)3arad]1/3ρ1/3

 

=

[(μe)4(1ββ4)3arad]1/3ρ1+1/3,

which can be immediately associated with a polytropic relation of the form,

P=Keρ1+1/ne,

with,

ne

=

3,

Ke

=

[(μe)4(1ββ4)3arad]1/3.

So, from the solution, ϕ(η), to the Lane-Emden equation of index n=3, we will be able to determine that,

ρ

=

ρeϕ3,

and,

r

=

a3η,

where — see our general introduction to the Lane-Emden equation

a32

=

(KeπG)ρe2/3.

This is the envelope structure that will be incorporated into our derivation of the bipolytrope's properties, below.

In contrast to this approach, 📚 Milne (1930) chose to relate the solution to the envelope's n=3 Lane-Emden equation directly to the temperature via the expression,


T=λϕ,

and deduced that the corresponding radial scale-factor is (see Milne's equation 27),

aMilne2

=

1λ2(μe)2(1β)β2(3πaradG).

In order to demonstrate the relationship between our radial scale-factor (a3) and Milne's, we note that,

ϕ3

=

(Tλ)3=ρρe

λ3

=

ρe(T3ρ)

 

=

ρe[(μe)(1ββ)3arad]

λ2

=

ρe2/3[(μe)(1ββ)3arad]2/3.

Hence,

aMilne2

=

ρe2/3[(μe)(1ββ)3arad]2/3(μe)2(1β)β2(3πaradG)

 

=

ρe2/3(1πG)[(μe)4(1β)β4(3arad)]1/3

 

=

ρe2/3(KeπG).

It is clear, therefore, that the two radial scale-factors are the same. In preparation for our further discussion of the structure of this bipolytrope's envelope, below, it is useful to highlight the following two expressions that have been developed here in the process of showing the correspondence between our work and that of Milne:

A Pair of Highlighted Relations

ρe

=

λ3[(μe)(1ββ)3arad]1

 

=

λ3[(μe)1β(1β)13arad]

Ke

=

[(μe)4(1ββ4)3arad]1/3

Core[edit]

In contrast to the envelope, 📚 Milne (1930) assumed that the (non-relativistic; "NR") electron degeneracy pressure dominates over the ideal-gas pressure in the core. That is, he assumed that, throughout the core of his composite polytropic configuration,

βP=Pgas0+Pdeg|NR.

As we have demonstrated elsewhere, the non-relativistic expression for the degeneracy pressure is,

Pdeg|NR

=

1225(3π)2/3(h2me)[ρ(μe)mp]5/3,

which can be associated with a polytropic relation of the form,

Pdeg|NR=Kcρ1+1/nc,

that is, a total pressure of the form,

βP=Kcρ1+1/nc,

with,

nc

=

32,

Kc

=

1225(3π)2/3(h2me)[1(μe)mp]5/3.

(Note that, here only, we have used the parameter, μe, to denote the molecular weight of electrons, instead of just μe, in order not to confuse it with the mean molecular weight assigned to the envelope material.) So, from the solution, θ(ξ), to the Lane-Emden equation of index n=32, we will be able to determine that,

ρ

=

ρ0θ3/2,

and,

r

=

a3/2ξ,

where — see our general introduction to the Lane-Emden equation

(a3/2)2

=

(5Kc23πG)ρ01/3.

This is the core structure that will be incorporated into our derivation of the bipolytrope's properties.

This is precisely the approach taken by 📚 Milne (1930). Just before his equation (43), Milne states that, "the equation of state when the electrons alone are degenerate can be shown" to be,

p

=

15(34π)2/3h2(2mH)5/3meqe2/3ρ5/3,

which, upon regrouping terms gives,

p

=

15(3π)2/3(124qe2)1/3h2me(ρ2mH)5/3.

Recognizing that Milne set qe=2, as "the statistical weight of an electron," and that he adopted a molecular weight of the electrons, μe=2, this expression for the equation of state exactly matches our expression for Pdeg|NR. Our enlistment of an nc=32 polytropic equation of state for the core is therefore also perfectly aligned with Milne's treatment of the core; in particular, according to Milne, at each radial location throughout the core the total pressure can be obtained from the expression,

P=Kβρ5/3,

with Milne's coefficient, K, having the same definition as our coefficient, Kc.

See Also[edit]


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