fbpx
Wikipedia

Tidal tensor

In Newton's theory of gravitation and in various relativistic classical theories of gravitation, such as general relativity, the tidal tensor represents

  1. tidal accelerations of a cloud of (electrically neutral, nonspinning) test particles,
  2. tidal stresses in a small object immersed in an ambient gravitational field.

The tidal tensor represents the relative acceleration due to gravity of two test masses separated by an infinitesimal distance. The component represents the relative acceleration in the direction produced by a displacement in the direction.

Tidal tensor for a spherical body edit

The most common example of tides is the tidal force around a spherical body (e.g., a planet or a moon). Here we compute the tidal tensor for the gravitational field outside an isolated spherically symmetric massive object. According to Newton's gravitational law, the acceleration a at a distance r from a central mass m is

 

(to simplify the math, in the following derivations we use the convention of setting the gravitational constant G to one. To calculate the differential accelerations, the results are to be multiplied by G.)

Let us adopt the frame in polar coordinates for our three-dimensional Euclidean space, and consider infinitesimal displacements in the radial and azimuthal directions,   and  , which are given the subscripts 1, 2, and 3 respectively.

 

We will directly compute each component of the tidal tensor, expressed in this frame. First, compare the gravitational forces on two nearby objects lying on the same radial line at distances from the central body differing by a distance h:

 

Because in discussing tensors we are dealing with multilinear algebra, we retain only first order terms, so  . Since there is no acceleration in the   or   direction due to a displacement in the radial direction, the other radial terms are zero:  .

Similarly, we can compare the gravitational force on two nearby observers lying at the same radius   but displaced by an (infinitesimal) distance h in the   or   direction. Using some elementary trigonometry and the small angle approximation, we find that the force vectors differ by a vector tangent to the sphere which has magnitude

 

By using the small angle approximation, we have ignored all terms of order  , so the tangential components are  . Again, since there is no acceleration in the radial direction due to displacements in either of the azimuthal directions, the other azimuthal terms are zero:  .

Combining this information, we find that the tidal tensor is diagonal with frame components   This is the Coulomb form characteristic of spherically symmetric central force fields in Newtonian physics.

Hessian formulation edit

In the more general case where the mass is not a single spherically symmetric central object, the tidal tensor can be derived from the gravitational potential  , which obeys the Poisson equation:

 

where   is the mass density of any matter present, and where   is the Laplace operator. Note that this equation implies that in a vacuum solution, the potential is simply a harmonic function.

The tidal tensor is given by the traceless part [1]

 

of the Hessian

 

where we are using the standard Cartesian chart for E3, with the Euclidean metric tensor

 

Using standard results in vector calculus, this is readily converted to expressions valid in other coordinate charts, such as the polar spherical chart

 
 

Spherically symmetric field edit

As an example, we can calculate the tidal tensor for a spherical body using the Hessian. Next, let us plug the gravitational potential   into the Hessian. We can convert the expression above to one valid in polar spherical coordinates, or we can convert the potential to Cartesian coordinates before plugging in. Adopting the second course, we have  , which gives

 

After a rotation of our frame, which is adapted to the polar spherical coordinates, this expression agrees with our previous result. The easiest way to see this is to set   to zero so that the off-diagonal terms vanish and  , and then invoke the spherical symmetry.

In General Relativity edit

In general relativity, the tidal tensor is generalized by the Riemann curvature tensor. In the weak field limit, the tidal tensor is given by the components   of the curvature tensor.


See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Baldauf, Tobias; Seljak, Uros; Desjacques, Vincent; McDonald, Patrick (13 January 2018). "Evidence for Quadratic Tidal Tensor Bias from the Halo Bispectrum". Physical Review D. 86 (8): 083540. arXiv:1201.4827. Bibcode:2012PhRvD..86h3540B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.86.083540. S2CID 21681130.

External links edit

  • Sperhake, Ulrich. "Part II General Relativity Lecture Notes" (PDF): 19. Retrieved 13 January 2018. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Renaud, F.; Boily, C. M.; Naab, T.; Theis, Ch. (20 November 2009). "Fully Compressive Tides in Galaxy Mergers". The Astrophysical Journal. 706 (1): 68. arXiv:0910.0196. Bibcode:2009ApJ...706...67R. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/706/1/67. S2CID 15831572.
  • Duc, Pierre-Alain; Renaud, Florent. "Gravitational potential and tidal tensor". ned.ipac.caltech.edu. Caltech. Retrieved 13 January 2018.

tidal, tensor, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 2018,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Tidal tensor news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Newton s theory of gravitation and in various relativistic classical theories of gravitation such as general relativity the tidal tensor represents tidal accelerations of a cloud of electrically neutral nonspinning test particles tidal stresses in a small object immersed in an ambient gravitational field The tidal tensor represents the relative acceleration due to gravity of two test masses separated by an infinitesimal distance The component F a b displaystyle Phi a b represents the relative acceleration in the a displaystyle hat a direction produced by a displacement in the b displaystyle hat b direction Contents 1 Tidal tensor for a spherical body 2 Hessian formulation 2 1 Spherically symmetric field 3 In General Relativity 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksTidal tensor for a spherical body editThe most common example of tides is the tidal force around a spherical body e g a planet or a moon Here we compute the tidal tensor for the gravitational field outside an isolated spherically symmetric massive object According to Newton s gravitational law the acceleration a at a distance r from a central mass m is a G m r 2 displaystyle a Gm r 2 nbsp to simplify the math in the following derivations we use the convention of setting the gravitational constant G to one To calculate the differential accelerations the results are to be multiplied by G Let us adopt the frame in polar coordinates for our three dimensional Euclidean space and consider infinitesimal displacements in the radial and azimuthal directions r 8 displaystyle partial r partial theta nbsp and ϕ displaystyle partial phi nbsp which are given the subscripts 1 2 and 3 respectively ϵ 1 r ϵ 2 1 r 8 ϵ 3 1 r sin 8 ϕ displaystyle vec epsilon 1 partial r vec epsilon 2 frac 1 r partial theta vec epsilon 3 frac 1 r sin theta partial phi nbsp We will directly compute each component of the tidal tensor expressed in this frame First compare the gravitational forces on two nearby objects lying on the same radial line at distances from the central body differing by a distance h m r h 2 m r 2 2 m h r 3 3 m h 2 r 4 O h 3 displaystyle m r h 2 m r 2 2mh r 3 3mh 2 r 4 O h 3 nbsp Because in discussing tensors we are dealing with multilinear algebra we retain only first order terms so F 11 2 m r 3 displaystyle Phi 11 2m r 3 nbsp Since there is no acceleration in the 8 displaystyle theta nbsp or ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp direction due to a displacement in the radial direction the other radial terms are zero F 12 F 13 0 displaystyle Phi 12 Phi 13 0 nbsp Similarly we can compare the gravitational force on two nearby observers lying at the same radius r r 0 displaystyle r r 0 nbsp but displaced by an infinitesimal distance h in the 8 displaystyle theta nbsp or ϕ displaystyle phi nbsp direction Using some elementary trigonometry and the small angle approximation we find that the force vectors differ by a vector tangent to the sphere which has magnitude m r 0 2 sin 8 m r 0 2 h r 0 m r 0 3 h displaystyle frac m r 0 2 sin theta approx frac m r 0 2 frac h r 0 frac m r 0 3 h nbsp By using the small angle approximation we have ignored all terms of order O h 2 displaystyle O h 2 nbsp so the tangential components are F 22 F 33 m r 3 displaystyle Phi 22 Phi 33 m r 3 nbsp Again since there is no acceleration in the radial direction due to displacements in either of the azimuthal directions the other azimuthal terms are zero F 21 F 31 0 displaystyle Phi 21 Phi 31 0 nbsp Combining this information we find that the tidal tensor is diagonal with frame components F a b m r 3 diag 2 1 1 displaystyle Phi hat a hat b frac m r 3 operatorname diag 2 1 1 nbsp This is the Coulomb form characteristic of spherically symmetric central force fields in Newtonian physics Hessian formulation editIn the more general case where the mass is not a single spherically symmetric central object the tidal tensor can be derived from the gravitational potential U displaystyle U nbsp which obeys the Poisson equation D U 4 p m displaystyle Delta U 4 pi mu nbsp where m displaystyle mu nbsp is the mass density of any matter present and where D displaystyle Delta nbsp is the Laplace operator Note that this equation implies that in a vacuum solution the potential is simply a harmonic function The tidal tensor is given by the traceless part 1 F a b J a b 1 3 J m m h a b displaystyle Phi ab J ab frac 1 3 J m m eta ab nbsp of the Hessian J a b 2 U x a x b displaystyle J ab frac partial 2 U partial x a partial x b nbsp where we are using the standard Cartesian chart for E3 with the Euclidean metric tensor d s 2 d x 2 d y 2 d z 2 lt x y z lt displaystyle ds 2 dx 2 dy 2 dz 2 infty lt x y z lt infty nbsp Using standard results in vector calculus this is readily converted to expressions valid in other coordinate charts such as the polar spherical chart d s 2 d r 2 r 2 d 8 2 sin 8 2 d ϕ 2 displaystyle ds 2 d rho 2 rho 2 left d theta 2 sin theta 2 d phi 2 right nbsp 0 lt r lt 0 lt 8 lt p p lt ϕ lt p displaystyle 0 lt rho lt infty 0 lt theta lt pi pi lt phi lt pi nbsp Spherically symmetric field edit As an example we can calculate the tidal tensor for a spherical body using the Hessian Next let us plug the gravitational potential U m r displaystyle U m rho nbsp into the Hessian We can convert the expression above to one valid in polar spherical coordinates or we can convert the potential to Cartesian coordinates before plugging in Adopting the second course we have U m x 2 y 2 z 2 displaystyle U m sqrt x 2 y 2 z 2 nbsp which gives F a b m x 2 y 2 z 2 5 2 y 2 z 2 2 x 2 3 x y 3 x z 3 x y x 2 z 2 2 y 2 3 y z 3 x z 3 y z x 2 y 2 2 z 2 displaystyle Phi ab frac m x 2 y 2 z 2 5 2 left begin matrix y 2 z 2 2x 2 amp 3xy amp 3xz 3xy amp x 2 z 2 2y 2 amp 3yz 3xz amp 3yz amp x 2 y 2 2z 2 end matrix right nbsp After a rotation of our frame which is adapted to the polar spherical coordinates this expression agrees with our previous result The easiest way to see this is to set y z displaystyle y z nbsp to zero so that the off diagonal terms vanish and r x displaystyle rho x nbsp and then invoke the spherical symmetry In General Relativity editIn general relativity the tidal tensor is generalized by the Riemann curvature tensor In the weak field limit the tidal tensor is given by the components F i j R i 0 j 0 displaystyle Phi ij R i0j0 nbsp of the curvature tensor See also editTidal force Stress tensorReferences edit Baldauf Tobias Seljak Uros Desjacques Vincent McDonald Patrick 13 January 2018 Evidence for Quadratic Tidal Tensor Bias from the Halo Bispectrum Physical Review D 86 8 083540 arXiv 1201 4827 Bibcode 2012PhRvD 86h3540B doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 86 083540 S2CID 21681130 External links editSperhake Ulrich Part II General Relativity Lecture Notes PDF 19 Retrieved 13 January 2018 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Renaud F Boily C M Naab T Theis Ch 20 November 2009 Fully Compressive Tides in Galaxy Mergers The Astrophysical Journal 706 1 68 arXiv 0910 0196 Bibcode 2009ApJ 706 67R doi 10 1088 0004 637X 706 1 67 S2CID 15831572 Duc Pierre Alain Renaud Florent Gravitational potential and tidal tensor ned ipac caltech edu Caltech Retrieved 13 January 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tidal tensor amp oldid 1213273741, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.