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Astrofisica Estelar

This document summarizes the concept of convective stability in astrophysics. It discusses: 1) How buoyancy leads to convective instability if a displaced blob has a different density than its surroundings, causing it to experience a net force away from its initial position. 2) The Schwarzschild criterion for convective stability, which depends on temperature and pressure gradients - stability requires the physical temperature gradient to be less than the adiabatic gradient. 3) How regions can be classified as convective or radiative based on comparing the actual temperature gradient to the radiative and adiabatic gradients.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
49 views3 pages

Astrofisica Estelar

This document summarizes the concept of convective stability in astrophysics. It discusses: 1) How buoyancy leads to convective instability if a displaced blob has a different density than its surroundings, causing it to experience a net force away from its initial position. 2) The Schwarzschild criterion for convective stability, which depends on temperature and pressure gradients - stability requires the physical temperature gradient to be less than the adiabatic gradient. 3) How regions can be classified as convective or radiative based on comparing the actual temperature gradient to the radiative and adiabatic gradients.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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25 — Convective Stability [Revision : 1.

4]
• Bouyancy
– Familiar concept: an object lighter than its surroundings rises (bubbles, hot air balloons)
– Consequence of hydrostatic stratification
– Consider bubble with density ρ(b) and volume dτ (b) , immersed in surroundings with
density ρ(s) .
– Force on bubble due to surrounding pressure gradients is
dP (b)
Fp = − dτ
dr
Important Note: no b or s on P because pressure inside and outside bubble are same
— pressure equalization is almost instantaneous (timescale is blob size / sound speed)
– Assume surroundings are in hydrostatic equilibrium; pressure gradient is
dP
= −ρ(s) g
dr
and so
Fp = ρ(s) gdτ (b)
– Force on bubble due to gravity is

Fg = −gρ(b) dτ (b)

– Net force
F = Fp + Fg = g(ρ(s) − ρ(b) )dτ (b) ,
or per-unit-volume
F
f= = g(ρ(s) − ρ(b) )
dτ (b)
• Convective Instability
– Consider bubble starting out at same density, temperature as surroundings; f = 0
– Bubble then displaced ∆r in radial direction (by random fluctuation); net force per unit
volume is
f = g(∆ρ(s) − ∆ρ(b) )
where ∆ρ(s) is change in density of surroundings, and ∆ρ(b) is change in density of blob
– If f has same sign as ∆r, then force will push blob further away from starting position
— instability!
– Result of this instability is convection: rising and falling motions that transport energy
– How do we calculate ∆ρ(s) and ∆ρ(b) ?
• Density Changes
– Surrounding density change ∆ρ(s) given by ambient density gradient:

∆ρ(s) = ∆r.
dr
– Bubble change depends on the thermodynamic processes going on in blob as it moves
– For simplicity, assume no energy exchange with surroundings — adiabatic motion
– For adiabatic changes,
∆P ∆ρ

P ρ
where γ is ratio of specific heats of gas (see O&C, eqn. 10.81)
– So,
1 ρ 1 ρ dP
∆ρ(b) = ∆P = ∆r
γP γ P dr
• Bubble Motion

– Putting together, net force per unit volume on bubble:


 
dρ 1 ρ dP
f =g − ∆r
dr γ P dr

– Apply Newton’s Second Law to bubble:

d2 ∆r
ρ = −ρN 2 ∆r
dt2
where  
2 1 d ln P d ln ρ
N =g −
γ dr dr
is the square of the Brunt-Väisälä frequency.
– Solutions with N 2 > 0: (
sin(N t)
∆r ∝
cos(N t)
Oscillatory motion; stable, no convection
– Solutions with N 2 < 0: n √ √ 2
2
∆r ∝ e |N |t e− |N |t
Run-away motion; unstable, convection

• Stability Criteria

– Criterion for convective stability is N 2 > 0; this is the Schwarzschild Criterion:


1 d ln P d ln ρ
>
γ dr dr

– More common form for Schwarzschild Criterion is in terms of temperature gradients.


– For ideal gas, neglecting changes in µ,
d ln P d ln ρ d ln T
= +
dr dr dr
So, eliminating density gradient, stability criterion is
1 d ln P d ln P d ln T
> −
γ dr dr dr
Simplfying:
d ln T γ − 1 d ln P
>
dr γ dr
– Dividing through by −d ln P/dr,
∇ > ∇ad
where
d ln T
∇≡
d ln r
is the physical temperature gradient — quantity that depends on temperature gra-
dients in star; and
γ−1
∇ad ≡
γ
is adiabatic temperature gradient — quantity that depends on thermodynamic prop-
erties of stellar material

• Convective & Radiative Regions

– In any region, energy transport occurs by radiation alone (if convectively stable), or by
combination of radiation and convection (if convectively unstable)
– To find out what happens in a given region, consider radiative diffusion equation:

4acT 3 dT
Frad = −
3κρ dr
Rewrite as  −1
d ln T 3κρFrad d ln P
=∇=− .
d ln P 4acT 4 dr
– Introduce pressure scale height as
 −1
d ln P
HP = − ;
dr

then,
3κρFrad
∇= HP .
4acT 4
– Guided by this expression, introduce radiative temperature gradient as
3κρF
∇rad = HP ,
4acT 4
where F is total flux; this corresponds to value of ∇ that would ensue if all energy
transport is via radiation (i.e., if F = Frad )
– Use radiative gradient to test for convection: if ∇rad > ∇ad , then region is superadia-
batic, and will be convectively unstable
– Once convective motions are established, the following inequalities hold:
∗ ∇ ≥ ∇ad
∗ ∇ ≤ ∇rad
– Actual value of ∇ that ensues depends on details of convective energy transport

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