The basic framework of acoustic analogue gravity for first-order acoustic perturbations in barotropic and irrotational fluids in both the inviscid and viscous case is briefly reviewed in this section, as a motivation for the subsequent sections.
2.1. Auxiliary Fluid Mechanics
The fluid mechanics equations [
10,
11] governing viscous fluid systems are given by
Here and are the density and flow velocity of the fluid, respectively, and and are the two viscosity coefficients. The terms present on the RHS of the Euler equation are all the external forces acting on the system, namely, due to pressure gradient, due to the gravitational potential () and due to any other external potential (), respectively. The last two terms denote forces due to viscosity.
In our calculations, we assume, . The modified Navier–Stokes equation after making this assumption is given by
.
Considering the flow to be locally irrotational, i.e.,
, we can assume that the flow velocity
has a form,
, where
is the velocity potential. Incorporating this in the Euler and Navier–Stokes equations, we get
Following standard vector algebra, Equation (
2) can be written as
where
is the kinematic viscosity and
h is the specific enthalpy, given by,
. Equation (
3) is known as Burgers’ equation [
12].
2.2. Analogue Gravity in Inviscid Fluids
This subsection summarizes the rudiments of Unruh’s incipient work on the derivation of an acoustic analogue spacetime with a Lorentzian metric from the acoustic perturbation of a barotrpic, irrotational and inviscid fluid [
2,
3]. For inviscid systems, the continuity equation remains the same as described in Equation (
1), while Burgers’ equation becomes
This is the Euler equation for the velocity potential
. Equations (
1) and (
4) are linearized around the background (
), using
and
. Here
and
are the perturbations caused in the background density and velocity potential, respectively, due to the sonic disturbances.
Linearizing the continuity equation leads to the following equations:
Using
, we can linearize
h as
, where
. The Euler equation at
and
is given by
Substituting
from Equation (
8) into Equation (
6) by using
, we get
Equation (
9) can be compactly written in the form
where
Here with c being the local speed of sound in the unperturbed fluid.
Now, the equation of motion followed by scalar fields (
) propagating on a Lorentzian spacetime with a metric
is given by
where
is the d’Alembertian of
and
. For Equation (
10) to resemble Equation (
11), we must have
Using this equation, we get
Inverting , we get the acoustic metric
The signature of this metric is Lorentzian (-,+,+,+) and it thus describes the geometry of a Lorentzian acoustic spacetime as seen by the first-order sonic perturbations. It is clear that this metric is dependent on the flow parameters of the inviscid fluid in question, namely, the density and velocity of the unperturbed fluid. For quantum fluids such as superfluid helium or Bose–Einstein condensates in the hydrodynamic approximation, this acoustic metric is the starting point of many an assay to produce experimentally accessible phenomena. As already mentioned, some of these have actually been observed. However, most classical fluids are not inviscid and therefore remain outside the realm of observational accessibility. Nevertheless, Torres et al. [
9] broke new ground by beginning experimentation with water, a low-viscosity liquid which is freely available naturally. This raises the question whether one can relax the condition of inviscidity and study viscous fluids to explore possible acoustic geometries under perturbation. To this we now turn.
2.3. Violation of Lorentz Invariance Due to Viscosity
Acoustic general relativity retains its local Lorentz invariance akin to the formulation of physical spacetime geometry in general relativity. This is taken to be a hallmark of the entire acoustic gravity analogy. However, Visser [
3] has argued that for fluids with viscosity, this local Lorentz invariance may have to be sacrificed, thereby disturbing one of the key underpinnings of the acoustic analogy per se. In this subsection we summarize this argument, showing how viscosity breaks Lorentz invariance, with an important modification. It has been assumed [
3] that the
kinematic coefficient of viscosity (
) is spatially constant, so that it remains constant under acoustic perturbations. However, it is well known [
11] that the
dynamic viscosity (
) remains constant under pressure/density fluctuations. Since
, and under acoustic perturbations
, we have
where
is the kinematic coefficient of viscosity in the absence of acoustic perturbations. We also absorb the
factor into
. This coefficient of kinematic viscosity is itself
not spatially constant, as assumed in [
3], if, as stated in [
11], the dynamic coefficient of viscosity is under pressure/density perturbations. This calls into question the derivation of Burger’s equation for viscous fluids given in [
3], whose acoustic perturbations are then studied there. Fortunately, there is a physical argument for which Burger’s equation is still valid as an
approximate equation: the case for small kinematic viscosity
and, also, a slowly varying density, such that
is small. If both these hold, i.e., more precisely, if
, everywhere in the fluid, then indeed Burger’s equation holds as an approximate equation:
We shall assume in this subsection that Equation (
14) is obeyed as an exact equality, even though we do not assume that
is exactly spatially constant. In other words, the acoustic density perturbation effect in Equation (
13) shall indeed be taken into account.
Following the procedure of linearization on Equation (
14) as described in the previous section, we have
The linearized continuity equations remain the same as in the inviscid case (Equations (
5) and (
6)). Using
in Equation (
16), we can solve for
, yielding
where we have assumed
and defined
. It is obvious that without this restriction of a small
, a correction to the wave equation for the acoustic perturbations in the form of
is impossible to extract, since the correction term
itself is a function of
. Thus, in this form it is not easy to extract an effective velocity-dependent spatial correction metric, as has been obtained in [
3]. However, with this restriction, some progress towards showing Lorentz violation can be made.
If we ignore the non-constancy of
or its change under density perturbations, i.e., follow [
3], the continuity equation under acoustic perturbations (
6) can be used with (
17) to obtain
Writing the
lhs of the equation using the d’Alembertian for the inviscid acoustic metric, we get
Defining the fluid 4-velocity,
, and a modified metric with the modification only having a spatial part
, Equation (
17) can be written as
The Laplacian in the above equation is expressible only in terms of the spatial metric .
The acoustic metric can be written in terms of the spatial metric and the fluid 4-velocity as
The presence of in this equation breaks the Lorentz invariance as all inertial frames are no longer equivalent. Thus, the direct introduction of viscosity leads to the violation of Lorentz symmetry. Inclusion of the non-constancy effects of the viscosity complicates the extraction of a modified spatial metric since terms will have to be taken into account.
It is not an easy proposition that an acoustic metric à la Unruh [
2] be envisaged from this formulation. Under the circumstance, perhaps a new strategy must be evolved to deal with fluids with a small viscosity. It appears logical to adopt a method of
double perturbations, where we perturb the fluid potentials (and hence the velocity field) in terms of
both acoustic perturbations and viscosity. Clearly, the fluid density/pressure are exempt from the viscosity perturbations, since these, in some sense, are intrinsic parameters of the fluid, and hence independent of the viscosity coefficient. In any case, this is the assumption we make here. It will turn out that, with this assumption, up to the first order in both perturbations, the sequence in which the perturbations are introduced does not make any difference. Our perturbations equations will indeed reduce to Equation (
18) in some approximation. However, simplifications will result from our approach over and above that of [
3], as we show in the next section.