Random Transitions of a Binary Star in the Canonical Ensemble
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (i)
- A violent collisionless relaxation leading to the formation of a quasistationary (or metaequilibrium) state whose lifetime diverges when the number of particles ;
- (ii)
- A slow collisional relaxation leading to a long-lived metastable state (in idealized situations) whose lifetime increases exponentially with N;
- (iii)
- The absence of a statistical equilibrium state in a strict sense due to the evaporation of high-energy stars and the phenomenon of core collapse (gravothermal catastrophe or isothermal collapse);
- (iv)
- The inequivalence of statistical ensembles due to the nonadditivity of energy and entropy implying, for example, the existence of negative specific heats;2
- (v)
- The occurrence of zeroth- and first-order phase transitions between a dilute phase and a condensed phase when a small-scale regularization has been introduced in the system. The existence of long-lived metastable states can lead to a hysteresis behavior associated with cycles of gravitational “collapse” and “explosion” at the spinodal points.
- These curious behaviors (or some of them) also occur in other systems interacting via long-range forces such as two-dimensional point vortices in hydrodynamics, the Hamiltonian mean-field (HMF) model, and non-neutral plasmas. It is therefore important to develop a general framework to treat systems with long-range interactions and describe the numerous analogies (and sometimes the differences) between them. In that respect, self-gravitating systems provide a model of fundamental interest for which ideas of statistical mechanics and thermodynamics can be tested and developed. The main domain of application is astrophysics, but general methods can be transposed to other fields of physics.
2. Isolated Self-Gravitating Systems in the Microcanonical Ensemble
2.1. Hamilton Equations
2.2. Microcanonical Distribution
2.3. Divergences at Short and Large Distances
2.4. Thermodynamic Limit
2.5. Metastable States
- (i)
- There is no statistical equilibrium state (no entropy extremum) when .
- (ii)
- Stable equilibrium states exist for and . They are metastable (local entropy maxima).
- (iii)
- Equilibrium states with and are unstable (saddle points of entropy).
- (a)
- A change in stability in the microcanonical ensemble can occur only at a turning point of energy.
- (b)
- A mode of stability is lost when the caloric curve rotates clockwise and gained when it rotates anticlockwise.
3. Self-Gravitating Brownian Particles in the Canonical Ensemble
3.1. Langevin Equations
3.2. Canonical Distribution
3.3. Divergences at Short and Large Distances
3.4. Thermodynamic Limit
3.5. Metastable States
- (i)
- There is no statistical equilibrium state (no extremum of free energy) when ;
- (ii)
- Stable equilibrium states exist for and . They are metastable (local minima of free energy).
- (iii)
- Equilibrium states with and are unstable (saddle points of free energy).
- (a)
- A change in stability in the canonical ensemble can occur only at a turning point of temperature.
- (b)
- A mode of stability is lost when the caloric curve rotates clockwise and gained when it rotates anticlockwise.
3.6. Ensemble Inequivalence
4. Fluctuations of Energy in the Canonical Ensemble
4.1. Distribution of Energies and Thermodynamic Potential
4.2. Equilibrium States
4.3. Mean Field Approximation and Metastable States
4.4. Gaussian Distribution of Fluctuations
5. Lifetime of Metastable States
5.1. Fokker–Planck Equation in the Weak Friction Limit
5.2. Kramers Formula
6. Normal Form of the Thermodynamic Potential Close to the Critical Temperature
6.1. Saddle Node Form
6.2. Lifetime of Metastable States Close to the Critical Point
6.3. Normalized Variables
6.4. Large N Systems with
7. Dynamical Evolution of the Energy
7.1. Langevin Equation
7.2. Relaxation Time above the Critical Temperature
7.3. Collapse Time below the Critical Temperature
7.4. Finite Size Scaling
8. Statistical Mechanics of a Binary Star in the Microcanonical Ensemble
- (i)
- If , we have .
- (ii)
- If , we have .
- (i)
- If , we have
- (ii)
- If , we have
8.1. First Set of Dimensionless Variables
8.2. Second Set of Dimensionless Variables
9. Statistical Mechanics of a Binary Star in the Canonical Ensemble
9.1. First Set of Dimensionless Variables
9.2. Second Set of Dimensionless Variables
10. Fluctuations of the Energy of a Binary Star in the Canonical Ensemble
11. Random Transitions of a Binary Star in the Canonical Ensemble
12. Lifetime of a Metastable Binary Star with
12.1. Microcanonical Ensemble
12.2. Canonical Ensemble
12.3. Normal Form of the Potential
12.4. Kramers Formula
12.5. Particles of Different Mass
13. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Density of States in d Dimensions
Appendix B. Asymptotic Behavior of the Partition Function of the Binary Star
Appendix C. Reformulation of the Main Results in Terms of Dimensionless Variables
Appendix C.1. General Dimensionalization
Appendix C.2. Normal Form of the Thermodynamic Potential Close to the Critical Temperature
Appendix C.3. Lifetime of Metastable States
Appendix D. Dimensionalization for a Binary Star
Appendix D.1. First Set of Dimensionless Variables
Appendix D.2. Second Set of Dimensionless Variables
Appendix E. Kramers Formula
Appendix E.1. Stationary Solution of the Smoluchowski Equation
Appendix E.2. Eigenvalue Equation
Appendix E.3. Instanton Theory
Appendix E.4. Relation between J and λ
1 | The literature on the subject is vast. A detailed historical account can be found in the introductions of our papers [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8], where an exhaustive list of references is given. We also refer to the reviews [9,10,11,12,13,14,15] on the statistical mechanics of self-gravitating systems and to the book [16] on the dynamics and thermodynamics of systems with long-range interactions. |
2 | For self-gravitating systems and other systems with long-range interactions, negative specific heats are allowed in the microcanonical ensemble, whereas they are forbidden in the canonical ensemble. This implies that the statistical ensembles may be inequivalent in some range of energy and temperature [17,18,19]. Therefore, a clear distinction must be made between microcanonical and canonical ensembles. The region of negative specific heat in the microcanonical ensemble is replaced by an isothermal phase transition in the canonical ensemble |
3 | Padmanabhan [10] and Campa et al. [16] argue that only the microcanonical ensemble makes sense for systems with long-range interactions. Although we agree on this point for what concerns isolated Hamiltonian systems with long-range interactions, we argued in [15,20,21] that the canonical ensemble can describe a dissipative gas of Brownian particles with long-range interactions in contact with a thermal bath. |
4 | The self-gravitating Brownian gas may describe the evolution of planetesimals in the solar nebula in the context of planet formation. In that case, the dust particles experience friction with the gas and a stochastic force due to Brownian motion or turbulence [23]. If the gas of dust particles is sufficiently dense (e.g., at special locations such as large-scale vortices), then self-gravity becomes important, leading to gravitational collapse and planet formation. The canonical (and grand canonical) ensemble may also describe an isothermal self-gravitating gas such as the interstellar medium in equilibrium with a radiation background that imposes the temperature at in regions devoid of heating sources [24]. |
5 | |
6 | The extrema of entropy at fixed mass and energy coincide with the extrema of free energy at fixed mass (first variations of the thermodynamic potential). Therefore, the series of equilibria is the same in the two ensembles. Ensemble inequivalence may occur when we consider the stability of the system (second variations of the thermodynamic potential). |
7 | When quantum mechanics is taken into account, the collapse stops when the system feels the effect of the Pauli exclusion principle. The resulting equilibrium state is a “fermion ball”, resembling a white dwarf star at zero temperature, surrounded by a halo [15,25,26,27,28]. In the core, further gravitational contraction is prevented by the quantum pressure. We can thus describe a phase transition from a weakly inhomogeneous gaseous phase to a condensed phase with a core–halo structure. At high energies in the microcanonical ensemble or at high temperatures in the canonical ensemble, the condensate experiences an explosion, reverse to the collapse, and returns to the gaseous phase. Due to the existence of long-lived metastable states, the points of collapse and explosion differ. This leads to a notion of a hysteresis cycle [15,30]. Similar results are obtained for a hard sphere gas and for other forms of small-scale regularization [28,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39]. |
8 | Throughout this paper, we take the Boltzmann constant . |
9 | If the system is confined within a box or surrounded by an external medium, we need to take into account pressure forces in the virial theorem and the specific heat may be positive. |
10 | A similar mechanism is at work in globular clusters and leads to a gravothermal catastrophe [17]. |
11 | The final equilibrium state of the system is just two stars in Keplerian orbits, all the other stars being dispersed to infinity. In this sense, the statistical mechanics of self-gravitating systems is essentially an out-of-equilibrium problem. However, the evaporation rate is small in general, and the system can be found in a quasiequilibrium state for a relatively long time (see the conclusion). |
12 | We can also invoke quantum mechanics. For self-gravitating fermions, the small-scale stabilization is due to the Pauli exclusion principle, and for self-gravitating bosons in the form of Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs), it is due to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle (see, e.g., [48]). |
13 | The entropy is usually written as , where W is the number of microstates (complexions) associated with a given macrostate. This is the usual manner to compute the entropy. This relation is referred to as the Boltzmann formula, although Boltzmann never wrote this formula explicitly (this relation was formulated by Planck [49]). Conversely, assuming that the entropy is known, Einstein [50] wrote this relation under the form , where is the probability density of the macrostate f (Einstein interpreted it as the probability of a fluctuation). The density of states is therefore the integral of over f, taking into account the constraints and . |
14 | A summary of the Poincaré turning point criterion for linear series of equilibria is given in Appendix C of [5]. |
15 | In the present context, the canonical distribution is justified from the N-body Fokker–Planck equation, not by considering a subpart of a large isolated system. As we have already indicated, this last procedure is not valid for a Hamiltonian system whose energy is non-additive. By contrast, our justification of the canonical ensemble for a Brownian system whose dynamics is described by a set of Langevin equations is completely rigorous even if the particles have long-range interactions. It is also valid for an arbitrary number of particles, even for only Brownian particles in interaction. |
16 | |
17 | |
18 | In principle, we should integrate over the momenta rather than over the velocities (see Appendix A) but, in the present context, we find it more convenient to work in terms of the velocity. |
19 | In the unstable case, represents the growth rate of the instability. |
20 | This statistical analysis is rigorously justified for self-gravitating Brownian particles described by the Langevin Equations (16) in the canonical ensemble even for particles. |
21 | At the canonical critical point , the specific heat diverges at , corresponding to . It behaves as for and as for . |
22 | The strict caloric curve in the canonical ensemble obtained by keeping only the global minima of free energy differs from the exact caloric curve because of finite N effects (here ). They coincide when . |
23 | We cannot use the first normalization because the size a of the particles explicitly appears in the scales used to normalize the variables. |
24 | |
25 | Heggie and Stevenson [63] confirmed these results by constructing self-similar solutions of the orbit-averaged-Fokker–Planck equation in the pre-collapse and post-collapse regimes. |
26 | The Burkert profile is similar to the Navarro–Frenk–White (NFW) profile [114] at large distances but presents a central core instead of a cusp in agreement with the observations. |
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Chavanis, P.-H. Random Transitions of a Binary Star in the Canonical Ensemble. Entropy 2024, 26, 757. https://doi.org/10.3390/e26090757
Chavanis P-H. Random Transitions of a Binary Star in the Canonical Ensemble. Entropy. 2024; 26(9):757. https://doi.org/10.3390/e26090757
Chicago/Turabian StyleChavanis, Pierre-Henri. 2024. "Random Transitions of a Binary Star in the Canonical Ensemble" Entropy 26, no. 9: 757. https://doi.org/10.3390/e26090757
APA StyleChavanis, P. -H. (2024). Random Transitions of a Binary Star in the Canonical Ensemble. Entropy, 26(9), 757. https://doi.org/10.3390/e26090757