1. Introduction
Two-temperature plasmas have been studied in astrophysical systems for nearly fifty years. Early work considered the formation of light nuclei in two-temperature plasmas (the ion temperature being greater than the electrons) that could exist near relativistic astrophysical objects. Colgate [
1,
2] and, independently, Hoyle and Fowler [
3] looked at the synthesis of deuterium in a plasma (with ion temperature
K) generated in shock waves produced by supernovae. Shapiro et al. [
4] applied a two-temperature accretion disk model for Cygnus X-1 in order to produce the observed thermal emission temperatures of
K and the observed X-ray spectrum above
keV. More recently, Zhdankin et al. [
5] looked at the role of extreme two-temperature plasmas in radiative relativistic turbulence, while Ohmura et al. [
6] used simulations of two-temperature magnetohydrodynamics to describe the propagation of semi-relativistic jets. Ryan et al. [
7] have provided axisymmetric two-temperature general relativistic radiation magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the inner region of the accretion flow onto the supermassive black hole M87, while Meringolo et al. [
8] have looked at two-temperature plasmas in the context of special relativistic turbulence.
The literature on electron and ion plasmas shows there are many different scenarios under which two temperatures result, although whether or not the electrons are hotter than the ions is very much dependent on the particular scenario. In his classic text on plasmas and fusion reactions, Chen [
9] writes that positively charged ions can have a temperature that is different from that of their electrons even though they both have Maxwellian distributions. This is because the collision rate of the ions with themselves and the collision rate of electrons with themselves are much higher than that of electrons with ions. Kawazura et al. [
10] argue that in a collisionless plasma heated through Alvenic turbulence electrons will be preferentially heated when the magnetic energy density is greater than the thermal energy density, whereas it is the ions that are hotter when the energy densities are the other way around.
The problem with developing models of complex plasmas in dynamical spacetimes, particularly for numerical simulations, is the consistency of the approximations used. It is standard to develop the approximations by dropping terms based on scaling arguments. Any “inconsistencies” introduced in the process typically lead to some (often small) loss of total energy or generation of spurious heat. However, as discussed in detail below, in a relativistic context heat will produce an effective mass, which contributes to the dynamics of a given system and (at least in principle) the generation of gravitational waves. Therefore, even small inconsistencies in the model development will lead to systematic errors in the generated (potentially observable) signals.
Our purpose here is to use well-established action-based techniques [
11] to construct the full suite of field equations for a consistent, resistive, two-fluid,
five-constituent, two-temperature general relativistic plasma. The model involves a positively charged species flux comoving with a charge-neutral species and a separate negatively charged species flux. The positively and neutrally charged species are assumed to have the same temperature and there is a single entropy comoving with them. Because the negatively charged species is at a different temperature, it will have its own (comoving) entropy.
To see how this comes about, consider the simple case of ionized hydrogen, for which the collective behavior of the electrons means they can be described as a fluid. They have well-defined fluid elements with their own four-velocities, and within these elements there will be a thermodynamic description based on, say, temperature and particle density. Clearly, this assumes that the electrons are thermalized; i.e., from a kinetic theory point of view their state can be described by an equilibrium distribution function (say, Maxwell). From that same kinetic theory point of view, we know that entropy is calculable from the distribution. All of this is also true for the protons, except that the difference in temperature would necessarily lead to a different (maybe not in form, but certainly in specific values) distribution and hence different values for the entropy. Since the electrons are at equilibrium among themselves, and likewise for the protons, the electron entropy flows along with the electrons and the proton entropy flows along with the protons; therefore, because the electrons flow relatively to the protons, there are two entropy fluxes. It is conceptually straightforward to allow for ionization/recombination, by adding an additional flux of “neutral” particles. This leads to particle flux creation rates for both of the charged particle fluxes as well as the neutral particle flux. The conservation of the baryon number will of course link these two rates.
Given that the physical system considered is broad, and readers may have different backgrounds—plasma physics, astrophysics, numerical relativity, and so on—we have tried to make this presentation as self-contained as possible. For example, there is an extended discussion of the so-called
approach to general relativity. We have attempted to make this a basic exercise in projecting tensors into spacelike hypersurfaces or onto the normals to these hypersurfaces. Moreover, in order to set up the taking of the Newtonian limit (in
Section 6), it is advantageous to keep
G,
c, the magnetic permeability
, and
in the equations. Of course, this involves introducing a set of conventions, which are initially somewhat arbitrary but eventually self-consistent. The complexity of our total system, with its mixing of dynamical, electrodynamical, and thermodynamical energies, fluxes, and momenta, requires a careful, yet admittedly tedious, dimensional analysis of the field variables. The relevant dimensions of field variables will be discussed as the variables are introduced. This is also required for taking the Newtonian limit, where we need to have an internal calibration of what “small” is when we expand the field equations.
The plan of this effort is as follows: In
Section 2, the field variables are introduced, as well as some of their kinematical features. In
Section 3, the “matter space” [
11,
12] is introduced as it provides the arena in which fluid displacements are performed in the action principle. In
Section 4, we give the independent pieces of the action principle and derive the field equations. In
Section 5, we give an overview of the
formalism, focusing on the geometric arguments, and then apply it to the coupled system of general relativistic plasmas and electromagnetism. The overview is for the reader who is knowledgeable about plasma physics but not particularly familiar with numerical relativity and/or with how to take a generally covariant theory and introduce a global separation of space from time. We follow this up in
Section 5.4 with a review of the arguments given in [
13] for building simple models of resistivity, for both the charged and neutral current and entropy flows. This is used in
Section 6, where we take the Newtonian limit. In
Section 7, we offer some concluding remarks. Adding further details, in
Appendix A we review total charge conservation, in
Appendix B we derive the “3 + 1” form of the Einstein equations, and in
Appendix C we adapt the “3 + 1" formalism to a preferred coordinate system. The conventions of Misner, Thorne, and Wheeler [
14] are used throughout (although we use
rather than Greek letters to represent spacetime indices). We assume that the metric
is dimensionless, the coordinates carry the unit of length
l, and the time unit is given by
; e.g., the time coordinate
. As one might expect, the notation will quickly become a nightmare, and so notational conventions will be explained as the story develops.
2. The Plasma State and the Field Variables
The first step towards modeling a plasma system involves understanding the scales involved and the relevant variables. Perhaps the most important scale is the Debye length
, which is given by [
15],
where
is the number density of the
species,
its charge, and
its temperature. The Debye length is the effective distance at which the influence of a single charge is no longer felt by other particles; that is, for a length scale
l, somewhere between the inter-particle separation
and
, polarization (or collective) effects will occur so that charges outside of the Debye sphere (area
) are shielded from the single charge. For scales
L much bigger than
, the system will exhibit fluid-like features, such as wave propagation.
This helps establish criteria through which we can define the plasma state: (1) the typical length scale
L for the system must be much larger than the Debye length—
—and such that quasi-neutrality holds (
);
1 (2) there must be a large enough number of particles in the Debye sphere that collective effects occur so that the shielding takes hold (
); and (3) letting
represent the mean collision time for the neutral particles and
a time scale for collective plasma phenomena, we have that the last criterion is
.
In a system like an accretion disc around a black hole, there can be several length scales—the horizontal reach
L of the disc, the size
of the black hole with total mass
, and so on. A satisfactory fluid model of the matter and heat in the disc exists when the system can be broken up into a continuum of “boxes” of volume
, each of which is small enough that it can be considered as being microscopic with respect to the system as a whole (
) and yet large enough that it contains enough particles
N for which the Laws of Thermodynamics hold. In this case, intensive quantities, such as chemical potential, pressure, and temperature, will be well defined [
16].
In the limit where l becomes infinitesimal, these conceptual boxes become the fluid elements of fluid models. As the fluid evolves, the fluid elements will trace out a continuum of worldlines in spacetime, i.e., smooth curves whose spacetime points are identified by a set of coordinates , with being the proper time along the curves. Because the fluid elements contain particles, then these curves form the basis for tracking particle flux. It is important to note that since a fluid element is infinitesimal with respect to the system as a whole, then changes in the gravitational field across it are negligible. The equivalence principle also implies that the local geometry can be treated as flat spacetime.
Particle flux is defined in the standard way as being a number of particles
N passing through an area
per some time
; i.e., the particle flux magnitude is
. We define entropy flux in the same way, except to note that the entropy unit is
, which is energy
e per temperature
T. Assuming that we can count the amount of entropy as some number
times
, then the entropy flux will be
units of entropy passing through area
per time
; i.e., the entropy flux magnitude is
.
2Our system consists of a neutrally charged species (
) with particle flux
and a comoving entropy flux
; a positively charged species (
) with particle flux
and a comoving entropy flux
; and a negatively charged species (
) with particle flux
and a comoving entropy flux
. As we will see later, associated with the particle fluxes
are, respectively, canonically conjugate chemical potential covectors
(cf. Equation (
23)) and for the entropy fluxes
there are respective canonically conjugate “temperature” covectors
.
At this point, it is convenient to simplify the notation, by introducing constituent indices , which will take the values . With these, we will write generic particles fluxes such that the first three are , and the next three are . For the canonically conjugate covectors, we will identify and . In order to make direct contact with the First and Second Laws of Thermodynamics, we use an energy e to assign to the combination energy density units . This implies that the must have momentum units . The energy e can take two distinct forms: a particle energy based on mass energy, , for the set , and a thermal energy for the set .
The density
, with units
, associated with the flux
allows us to define a four-velocity field
, which is normalized such that
. These flux worldlines are tied to those of the fluid elements by setting
, where
is the proper time along the worldline traced out by
. We see that
or
. Note that in addition to the
we can have the mixed terms
, where it is to be understood that
.
3 With respect to a flux’s rest frame, i.e., the local frame that follows the worldline given by
, we can define the fluid potentials
. For
, the
are chemical potentials, and for
and
the
are temperatures
,
, and
.
The remaining field variables are the four-vector potential
and the spacetime metric
. The metric couples all fields to the spacetime curvature (and vice versa). With
and the charge density flux
, we can couple the charged fluids to the electromagnetic field (and vice versa). The total charge density flux is
The units of the charged current flux
are
. We note that MKS units are being used so that the electromagnetic coupling
combines with
to give
. The four-potential
has units of momentum per charge, or
, where
is a characteristic electromagnetic energy; for example, in the Debye limit case we would use
.
3. The Matter Space Approach to Dissipation
Our analysis builds on a well-established variational approach to relativistic multifluid dynamics [
11], including dissipative aspects. The main fluid fields in the model are the fluxes
. At the heart of the fluxes are the four-velocities
. In general, the
are not surface forming, but they do form a fibration of spacetime. If the
are given, then
can be integrated so as to construct the
. Since
, then knowing, say, the three spatial pieces
, automatically determines the time piece
. For some given spacelike hypersurface, no two worldlines of, say, the
fluid, will intersect that hypersurface at the same point.
If we think of this surface in the context of an initial-value problem, then each worldline will be uniquely determined by the three spatial coordinates they have on that initial hypersurface. It is through this that the so-called “matter space” or pull-back approach enters the fluid dynamics. We replace the initial spacelike hypersurface with an abstract, three-dimensional space endowed with coordinates
(having dimensions
l and
). Instead of each worldline being identified with a point on the initial spacelike hypersurface, each point
on the worldline gets mapped to the same point
in the matter space. Our goal here is to provide a sketch on how to reformulate our fluid model so that the
are the fundamental fields (see, e.g., Andersson and Comer [
11] for complete details).
The first step in this reformulation is to introduce the three-form
, which is dual to
:
where our convention for transforming between the two is
Likewise, we introduce the three-form
, which is dual to
:
Because the metric is dimensionless, we see that the three forms carry the same units as their dual vectors.
We use the map associated with the coordinates
of the
fluid’s matter space to “pullback”
into the matter space where it is identified with the totally antisymmetric tensor
:
such that the Einstein convention applies to repeated matter space indices, and
We also use the map associated with
to “push-forward” the fully antisymmetric matter space quantity
to the spacetime three-form
, via
as well as the symmetric matter space “metric”
to the spacetime metric
, via
Because of the antisymmetry in the indices of
and
, there are natural definitions for the volume form
and its inverse
on the
-matter space. These satisfy [
13,
16]
We can normalize
and
using the determinant of
; i.e.,
where
Now, we can write
where it can be shown that
[
16]. Similarly, we find
where it can be shown that
.
It is also straightforward to confirm that
From this we can verify that the
are conserved along their own worldlines (i.e., they are Lie-dragged by their
); that is, using Equation (
15), we see
since the term in parentheses vanishes identically. The quantity
is the covariant derivative, with the dimension of inverse length
.
In general, dissipation is directly connected with the (matter and/or entropy) particle flux creation rate
, which is given by
When
, there is no flux change and no dissipation. It is easy to see that there is a one-to-one, local identification of the divergence of a vector field with the exterior derivative of its associated three-form, i.e.,
; namely,
Simply put, if the three-form is closed (e.g.,
), then
and there is no dissipation; if the three-form is not closed (e.g.,
), then the divergence is not zero and dissipation can occur.
This is the lynchpin of the formalism for dissipative multifluid systems developed by Andersson and Comer [
17] and another reason for invoking the matter space. In fact, it was shown by Celora et al. [
16] that
We see immediately that if
is a function of only the
, then
because of Equation (
16). This is ideal when fluids are non-dissipative, because then their respective creation rates must vanish. However, if we allow
to also depend on
(for
), then the flux three-form is no longer closed and a system of fluid equations with resistive forms of dissipation
4 results [
13]. This will be shown later in
Section 4.2.
5. Formulation
Having derived the equations of motion for the plasma system, we want to make contact with applications and known results in the non-relativistic limit. In order to achieve this, we work out the
form of the field equations, keeping the speed of light explicit. This makes taking the Newtonian limit a simple power counting exercise and also sets the problem up for foliation-based numerical simulations. Our approach to the
problem follows the set of notes by Gourgoulhon [
33].
5.1. The Setup
We begin by restricting our formalism to a special class of manifolds—globally hyperbolic. These manifolds contain a family of causal curves, which are such that every vector tangent to them is timelike or null. They also contain a Cauchy surface, which is a spacelike hypersurface that is intersected exactly once by every inextendible causal curve in the manifold. It can be shown that on these manifolds with coordinates , a scalar “time” function exists such that its level (“constant time”) hypersurfaces can be smoothly stacked on top of each other to form a foliation of the spacetime.
A normal at a point on a constant-time hypersurface is obtained in the standard way by taking the gradient of the time function, i.e.,
, and then evaluating the gradient at the point under consideration. A unit normal
(
) at each point is created by introducing the so-called lapse function
N, which is a speed, as a normalization factor for
; that is,
If we build an initial slice of the foliation by solving
constant, the next one, say for
, will consist of the set of points obtained by moving the same, “small” proper distance in the
direction. The
will merge together from slice to slice to become tangents to worldlines. The acceleration
of an observer following one of these worldlines is
which introduces our notion of the time derivative.
So far, we have a mechanism for stacking the spacelike hypersurfaces, but nothing for how they “slip” past each other. To take care of that, we introduce a “flow-of-time” vector
(with the units of speed), which joins spatial points
on the hypersurface
to spatial points
on the next hypersurface
such that
; in words, it is the observers following
and not
who are “at rest” with respect to the foliation slices. We normalize
by setting
We can use
in two ways to decompose
into pieces perpendicular and parallel to the foliation slices; namely,
where
is the so-called shift vector (with speed units). The tensor
is the (idempotent) operator that provides the parallel (spacelike) projection and
provides the perpendicular (timelike) projection. Since
, the shift vector satisfies
and therefore has no perpendicular component.
Each slice of the foliation is, in principle, a curved space. The curvature information is contained in an induced three-metric
given by
Our notion of spatial covariant derivative
is generated by the action of
on the covariant derivative of an arbitrary vector
; namely,
The three-metric
is compatible with
; i.e.,
. The intrinsic curvature of slices of the foliation,
, can be inferred from
The acceleration can be shown (by inserting Equation (
77) into (
78)) to have the alternative form
Because the three-dimensional slices of the foliation are embedded in four-dimensional spacetime, they have an extrinsic curvature
(with inverse time dimensions) given by
It is easy to show that the trace of the extrinsic curvature, which is
, becomes
When we develop the
form of the field equations, it will be found that the covariant derivative of
enters repeatedly. A couple of important “tools” for dealing with this can be obtained by applying the well-known decomposition
where
The most useful formula is a consequence of the fact that
is surface-forming: This implies
, and so therefore
From this, we can immediately show
5.2. Field Decompositions
We have just seen how the metric can be re-framed in terms of the lapse N, the shift-vector , and the three-metric . Now, we need to produce the similar re-framing for the remaining field variables and .
Using the projection operators
and
, and taking into account the dimensional analysis of the flux earlier, the
forms of the fluxes must be
From the definition of the four-velocity
, we can infer
and can therefore show
Because
and
, we have
and consequently
. Similarly, we have
and
.
For the chemical potential covector
, the dimensional analysis leads to a slightly different form for the decompositions:
If we substitute into the spatial part of this the initial result for
, i.e., Equation (
23), we find a form more amenable for the Newtonian limit, which is
where
As an effect of the tilting of the momenta, the chemical potentials in the fluid rest frames are related to those of the foliation in more complicated ways, which are
By direct substitution of the decompositions just above into Equation (
55), the generalized pressure
becomes
and the fluid/plasma part of
is
The charge current flux
is
and the four-potential
is
where we have introduced the scalar potential
(with the standard energy per charge units) and the three-vector potential
. Inserting this into the Faraday tensor, and using Equation (
89) for the covariant derivative, we find
The electric
and magnetic
fields are defined as
which implies
Finally, the electromagnetic contribution to
is
We end this subsection by pointing out that Equations (
99) and (
105) show that
naturally separates into “time-time”, “time-space”, and “space-space” pieces. Respectively, these give the total mass energy density
E, the total momentum density
, and the total stress
:
The terms in Equations (
99) and (
105) combine to give
5.3. The Field Equations
The logic of rewriting the Einstein, fluid/plasma, and electromagnetic field equations in their forms is the same as for the field variables—project free indices perpendicular to the foliation slices using the operator and project free indices parallel to the foliation slices using , and then make substitutions of the decomposed quantities derived in the previous section. The main complication is that the field equations have derivatives, and we will need to replace everywhere covariant derivatives with their counterparts and .
We will start with the Einstein equations as given in Equation (
62). The projections of the Ricci tensor
are performed in
Appendix B. When these and the terms
E,
, and
are substituted back into Equation (
62) we obtain the Hamiltonian constraint
the momentum constraint
and finally an evolution equation
For the fluid/plasma equations, the results are long, and so it is better to break them up into individual pieces and present them instead as follows:
We will present a more detailed look at
and
later in
Section 5.4.
Lastly, we have to evaluate the following projections of the Maxwell equations:
Before applying the projections, it is convenient to perform a little preparatory work: take the covariant derivative of Equation (
104), and use Equation (
89) to obtain
which, in turn, gives
and
Therefore, the
and
projections of the Maxwell equations and the continuity equation are [
34]
5.4. Resistivities and Dissipation in the Formalism
We have now finished our development of the
form of the full suite of field equations. This has been accomplished without having to make detailed statements about the specific dependence of
on
nor, in turn, the specific dependence of
on
. In fact, we have taken the point of view that each of these are “known” a priori, meaning that once a specific application is considered the relevant forms and dependencies can, at least in principle, be constructed based on the relevant microphysics of the system. However, even without such an analysis, the action-based formalism has taken us a long way. This has been pointed out already by Andersson et al. [
13]. They used this as a basic platform upon which resistivities could be built phenomenologically. Our purpose now is to give a review of the salient points and then to apply them to the two-temperature extended system considered here.
We start by applying Equation (
49) to the
decomposition of
, which is
By imposing Equation (
49), we find that
becomes
and the resistivity
is
Inserting this modified form for
into Equation (
68), we determine that the creation rate becomes
To make further progress, we impose three physical constraints—charge conservation, baryon number conservation, and the Second Law of Thermodynamics. The conservation of charge (cf. Equation (
35)) leads to
while the baryon number conservation (cf. Equation (
36)) says
The Second Law of Thermodynamics gives the inequality
In order to satisfy these, we need to be more specific about the terms, meaning that we will now make an ansatz about the form of the resistivity and flux creation rates but in a manner which is consistent with the overall formalism.
Onsager [
35] (see also [
36,
37]) developed an approach that relies on the notions of thermodynamic fluxes and forces. In our case, the thermodynamic fluxes are the
, and the thermodynamic forces are the
. The key step is to combine the fluxes and forces in such a way that they tend to drive the system towards a dynamical equilibrium where the relative flows are zero and a thermodynamical equilibrium where
all the while maintaining the inequality of Equation (
123).
We begin with an obvious choice for the
, which is to write
This causes the sum for the total entropy creation rate to be over the set of positive definite terms given by
. Because the relation for
is linear in the
, then we can reduce the number of
by imposing that (in their indices) they satisfy the same equalities that the
do in Equations (
63a)–(63f). Noting that
we can reduce again the number of
, by imposing charge (cf. Equation (
35)) and baryon number [cf. Equation (
36)] conservation, since they imply
The Second Law of Thermodynamics (cf. Equation (
123)) implies that the coefficients must satisfy
The independent resistivity vector takes the final form
where
We see that our final model requires the four coefficients to completely determine the creation rates and the independent resistivity . Notably, as (all the fluids are comoving), then and . Any further development of this model would require the microscopic modeling of specific systems to determine the four coefficients.
6. The “Newtonian” Limit
In order to make contact with existing work on two-temperature plasmas, which is mainly in the Newtonian setting, we will now work out the “Newtonian limit” of our equations. Poisson and Will [
38] point out that when gravity is formulated as a metric theory, then the limit we are imposing is to be understood as the first-order correction to flat spacetime, which is not, a priori, the same thing as Newtonian gravity, which is based on forces and action at a distance.
Our definition of the “Newtonian limit” includes the following criteria: (a) the particles are moving much slower than the speed of light
c; (b) the gravitational field is “weak”, meaning it is a linear perturbation away from flat spacetime (
); and (c) the gravitational field is static. The latter two criteria will be imposed by an expansion of
N,
, and
away from flat spacetime. Some of this work is presented in
Appendix C, where we have taken the
formulas and adapted them to a coordinate system such that the time coordinate
, where recall
is the scalar field from which the spacelike hypersurfaces of the foliation are constructed.
It is still an open question as to whether or not Newtonian gravity is a subset of this limit of general relativity or if it is all inclusive. Philosophical issues aside, we take a practical point of view, which is to impose the criteria (a), (b), and (c) above on the field equations and thereby extract the terms that formally survive the limit. It then becomes a question of the particular physical scenario to which the field equations are being applied as to whether or not all of the remaining terms are required.
6.1. The Metric Expansion and Linear Corrections to Flat Spacetime
In order to take the Newtonian gravitational limit of the Einstein equations, we will need to analyze the left- and right-hand sides separately. Here, we will be setting up the left-hand sides of the Hamiltonian and momentum constraints—Equations (
108) and (
109), respectively—and the evolution Equation (
110). We simplify the equations by taking the
to be Cartesian coordinates.
A linear expansion of the metric away from flat spacetime takes the form
where
is the Minkowski metric and the components of
are taken to be small, meaning that we ignore any terms of the form
,
, and so on. The flat spacetime pieces of the metric are
,
, and
. The flat spacetime plus linear perturbations metric pieces are
These expansions will be inserted into the left-hand sides of Equations (
108)–(
110), keeping only the first-order terms.
However, before we take that step, it is important to note that the Einstein equations have a “gauge” symmetry that basically comes from their coordinate invariance (or, more formally, diffeomorphism invariance). We employ that here by using the harmonic gauge, which takes the form
where we have used
In terms of the
decomposition, we have
and so the gauge condition leads to
where
. The unit normals to the hypersurfaces
, the acceleration
, and non-zero components of the projection operator
become, respectively,
In order to build
, we need to know the
. Taking Equation (
A25) and substituting in the expansions above, while keeping only the linear terms, we find
The gauge choice leads to
, but there remain linear-order
terms, which are
We find that the linearized forms for
and
are
The left-hand sides of Equations (
108), (
109), and (
110), respectively, now become
6.2. Newtonian Limit of the Fluid/Plasma and Energy–Momentum–Stress Tensor
Components
The main approximations for the flux variables are that their relative speeds
must be much less than the speed of light—we neglect terms of order
and higher—and energies that scale with
(such as the rest-mass energy densities
) are much bigger than other energy densities. The typical leading-order terms in the Master function
are the rest-mass energy densities, and so it is convenient to re-fashion
as a sum of
and an “internal energy” density
(having the same functional dependence as
):
We assume that entropy has zero rest-mass, but, because of entrainment, it does have an effective mass with a leading-order term proportional to
and it enters the field equations through its inclusion in
(cf. Equation (145b)).
We need to first consider the Newtonian limit of the momenta, as given in Equation (
94), but with the
and
computed using the rewritten
of Equation (
141). We will also reintroduce the notation that splits the particle number fluxes into the matter
and the entropy
pieces and the momenta into
and
. Here, the constituent indices for the matter are without a bar and range over
, whereas the indices with a bar are for the thermal pieces and range over
. In order to generate the momentum coefficients, we have five different sets of scalars, which can appear in the
: the first two are
and
, for which
; the next two are
,
, for which
; and the last is the mixed term
.
A variation of the re-formulated
yields the coefficients
which combine together to give
In
form we have
where we have defined
We can obtain a handle on the lowest-order impact of the condition
by expanding the parameters
,
,
,
, and
:
We see from this that the differences
,
, etc., are small. The expansion of
gives
where the “
” subscript means the quantity is evaluated for the ratio
. Because of effective mass effects, the combination
as it appears in, say,
, is not necessarily small.
The limiting form of the generalized pressure
(cf. Equation (
55)) is
and the
total energy density
E, momentum
, and stress
tend towards the values
We have assumed that the so-called “
” drift velocity for plasmas, i.e.,
, must be small with respect to
c. This leads to the constraint that
. We have assumed also that
.
6.3. The Field Equations
To obtain the limiting form of the Einstein equation, we first work out the leading-order of the right-hand sides of Equations (
108)–(
110):
Here, a factor of
combines with the velocity terms
to drive to zero the stress terms
and
; the same factor drives
. The limiting forms of the Einstein equation components are
If we take the trace of Equation (151c), we can solve for
. Substituting this into Equation (
151a) gives
where
is the standard gravitational potential. As a check of this identification, we note that the geodesic equation—
, where
is a point particle four-velocity—gives in this limit
where the last equality follows from Equation (136b).
Using again the trace Equation (151c) but substituting it into Equation (
152), then we find (to consistent order in
c)
which then implies
In this Newtonian context, we assume our system has compact support and is such that an asymptotically flat infinity exists for which
and
. Given that they both satisfy the Laplace equation, it is consistent to have
and
everywhere.
With this, we can implement now the limit of the fluid/plasma equations. Taking into account the fact that
and
can have non-zero terms in the limit
, then the individual pieces of the fluid/plasma equations in Equations (
111a)–(111f) and the projections of the final form of
given in Equation (
128) become
The Maxwell equations and the continuity equation take the expected form of
6.4. The Final Fluid/Plasma Newtonian Equations
Now we will write the final set of field equations so that we can point to some differences with those of the extant literature (such as [
39,
40]). We have clearly recovered the Newton equation for gravity and the Maxwell equations. The last thing is to collect all the fluid/plasma pieces to write the final form of their equations. To obtain the spirit of their role, we will assume that the gravitational and electromagnetic terms are known.
In total, we have to determine the six components
and
, as well as the six scalars
. Once the components
are known, then we can use the divergence formulas in Equations (
125a)–(125f), taken in combination with Equations (
156a) and (156f), to determine the six scalars. Likewise, we can use the non-relativistic limit of the Euler Equations (
58) and (
59) to determine
if the six scalars are known.
Using the sum of the non-relativistic forms of Equations (
58) and (
59) as the first Euler equation and keeping the non-relativistic form of Equation (
59) as the second, we find
where we have used Equation (
57) to infer
The obvious difference with the current literature is the impact of entrainment. We see that its effect of “tilting” the fluid momenta for the particles has survived the non-relativistic limit. Something else that survives is the entropy momentum. An unanticipated difference is the coupling of the particle and thermal effective masses to gravity (via the acceleration ).
Tracing back, it is the presence of
in
that leads to
and
in the first place. Given the approach taken here, there is no a priori, generic principle for why the entrainment pieces in the gravitational couplings should be negligible; obviously they survive the
limit. In the absence of a generic principle for why it should be, say,
and not
that couples to gravity, one must rely on the microscopic details of the particular system to be modeled. The difference between
and
can be assessed and then compared with the “smallness” of other approximations in the model.
7 7. Conclusions and Follow-On Work
We have presented an action principle that yields, from start to finish, the field equations for a dissipative/resistive general relativistic two-fluid two-temperature plasma, with a neutrally charged component. The model is distinct from previous general relativistic formulations of the two-temperature plasma system (some of which are cited throughout the text), none of which rely on action principles, as far as we know.
Due to the very nature of action principles, the couplings between the fields are self-consistently incorporated into the full suite of field equations. For example, follows automatically from the fields and couplings built into the total action, and its covariant divergence vanishes identically when the field equations are satisfied; i.e., is not itself an equation of motion but rather an identity (as it should be because of diffeomorphism invariance). Along these same lines, we have shown how the formal inclusion of terms such as in the fluid action naturally leads to entrainment between different fluids and effective masses for particles and entropy. We have also seen that electromagnetic gauge issues are automatically accounted for by the internal consistency of the overall formalism.
Because of the fact that systems containing plasmas occur across many independent branches of physics, we made an effort to provide a, more or less, self-contained presentation. This is especially true for the decomposition discussion, which includes steps that are textbook material. However, while these steps are well known in the general relativity community, they may well be new to other readers. Moreover, one of our main goals was to derive the Newtonian limit in a self-consistent way. This way, we recovered field equations very much like those in the extant literature, but we also saw a new element emerge: the effective mass of entropy.
By developing the framework from the fibration picture into
language, a step was taken towards a practical implementation of a two-temperature plasma within a general relativistic numerical simulation, as needed for neutron-star mergers. There are, however, many further steps that are required. As noted in [
32], as soon as an entrained multifluid system is constructed from this action approach not all the equations of motion can be written in a conservation law form. Standard approaches for numerically evolving solutions with discontinuities, particularly the shocks forming during mergers, then do not apply. Instead, path-conservative methods are required (see, e.g., [
41] for a brief review). However, these methods require a deeper understanding of the correct form of the dissipative terms appropriate to the model. Whilst the form of these terms can be deduced from the action framework, as detailed in [
17], we have not taken those steps here. Further work in this direction is required.
Moving forward, there are several steps that should be performed: The first step would be to analyze local waves and modes of oscillation, to obtain a basic understanding of the stability/instability properties of the system. This would provide some insight on when the temperature difference is driven to zero or forced to diverge. Another step would be to allow for the additional terms in the fluid action that lead to bulk and shear viscosity, so as to tackle the numerical evolution issue raised above. Finally, a post-Newtonian expansion of the field equations will further unravel the role of (particle and entropy) effective masses and their coupling to the gravitational field. This may shed further light on the relevance of the entropy entrainment.