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Virial theorem

In statistical mechanics, the virial theorem provides a general equation that relates the average over time of the total kinetic energy of a stable system of discrete particles, bound by a conservative force (forces characterized exclusively by their work),[dubious ] with that of the total potential energy of the system. Mathematically, the theorem states

where T is the total kinetic energy of the N particles, Fk represents the force on the kth particle, which is located at position rk, and angle brackets represent the average over time of the enclosed quantity. The word virial for the right-hand side of the equation derives from vis, the Latin word for "force" or "energy", and was given its technical definition by Rudolf Clausius in 1870.[1]

The significance of the virial theorem is that it allows the average total kinetic energy to be calculated even for very complicated systems that defy an exact solution, such as those considered in statistical mechanics; this average total kinetic energy is related to the temperature of the system by the equipartition theorem. However, the virial theorem does not depend on the notion of temperature and holds even for systems that are not in thermal equilibrium. The virial theorem has been generalized in various ways, most notably to a tensor form.

If the force between any two particles of the system results from a potential energy V(r) = αrn that is proportional to some power n of the interparticle distance r, the virial theorem takes the simple form

Thus, twice the average total kinetic energy T equals n times the average total potential energy VTOT. Whereas V(r) represents the potential energy between two particles of distance r, VTOT represents the total potential energy of the system, i.e., the sum of the potential energy V(r) over all pairs of particles in the system. A common example of such a system is a star held together by its own gravity, where n equals −1.

History edit

In 1870, Rudolf Clausius delivered the lecture "On a Mechanical Theorem Applicable to Heat" to the Association for Natural and Medical Sciences of the Lower Rhine, following a 20-year study of thermodynamics. The lecture stated that the mean vis viva of the system is equal to its virial, or that the average kinetic energy is equal to 1/2 the average potential energy. The virial theorem can be obtained directly from Lagrange's identity[moved resource?] as applied in classical gravitational dynamics, the original form of which was included in Lagrange's "Essay on the Problem of Three Bodies" published in 1772. Karl Jacobi's generalization of the identity to N bodies and to the present form of Laplace's identity closely resembles the classical virial theorem. However, the interpretations leading to the development of the equations were very different, since at the time of development, statistical dynamics had not yet unified the separate studies of thermodynamics and classical dynamics.[2] The theorem was later utilized, popularized, generalized and further developed by James Clerk Maxwell, Lord Rayleigh, Henri Poincaré, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, Enrico Fermi, Paul Ledoux, Richard Bader and Eugene Parker. Fritz Zwicky was the first to use the virial theorem to deduce the existence of unseen matter, which is now called dark matter. Richard Bader showed the charge distribution of a total system can be partitioned into its kinetic and potential energies that obey the virial theorem.[3] As another example of its many applications, the virial theorem has been used to derive the Chandrasekhar limit for the stability of white dwarf stars.

Illustrative special case edit

Consider N = 2 particles with equal mass m, acted upon by mutually attractive forces. Suppose the particles are at diametrically opposite points of a circular orbit with radius r. The velocities are v1(t) and v2(t) = −v1(t), which are normal to forces F1(t) and F2(t) = −F1(t). The respective magnitudes are fixed at v and F. The average kinetic energy of the system in an interval of time from t1 to t2 is

 
Taking center of mass as the origin, the particles have positions r1(t) and r2(t) = −r1(t) with fixed magnitude r. The attractive forces act in opposite directions as positions, so F1(t) ⋅ r1(t) = F2(t) ⋅ r2(t) = −Fr. Applying the centripetal force formula F = mv2/r results in:
 
as required. Note: If the origin is displaced then we'd obtain the same result. This is because the dot product of the displacement with equal and opposite forces F1(t), F2(t) results in net cancellation.

Statement and derivation edit

Although the virial theorem depends on averaging the total kinetic and potential energies, the presentation here postpones the averaging to the last step.

For a collection of N point particles, the scalar moment of inertia I about the origin is defined by the equation

 
where mk and rk represent the mass and position of the kth particle. rk = |rk| is the position vector magnitude. The scalar G is defined by the equation
 
where pk is the momentum vector of the kth particle.[4] Assuming that the masses are constant, G is one-half the time derivative of this moment of inertia
 
In turn, the time derivative of G can be written
 
where mk is the mass of the kth particle, Fk = dpk/dt is the net force on that particle, and T is the total kinetic energy of the system according to the vk = drk/dt velocity of each particle
 

Connection with the potential energy between particles edit

The total force Fk on particle k is the sum of all the forces from the other particles j in the system

 
where Fjk is the force applied by particle j on particle k. Hence, the virial can be written
 

Since no particle acts on itself (i.e., Fjj = 0 for 1 ≤ jN), we split the sum in terms below and above this diagonal and we add them together in pairs:

 
where we have assumed that Newton's third law of motion holds, i.e., Fjk = −Fkj (equal and opposite reaction).

It often happens that the forces can be derived from a potential energy Vjk that is a function only of the distance rjk between the point particles j and k. Since the force is the negative gradient of the potential energy, we have in this case

 

which is equal and opposite to Fkj = −∇rjVkj = −∇rjVjk, the force applied by particle k on particle j, as may be confirmed by explicit calculation. Hence,

 

Thus, we have

 

Special case of power-law forces edit

In a common special case, the potential energy V between two particles is proportional to a power n of their distance rij

 
where the coefficient α and the exponent n are constants. In such cases, the virial is given by the equation
 
where VTOT is the total potential energy of the system
 

Thus, we have

 

For gravitating systems the exponent n equals −1, giving Lagrange's identity

 
which was derived by Joseph-Louis Lagrange and extended by Carl Jacobi.

Time averaging edit

The average of this derivative over a duration of time, τ, is defined as

 
from which we obtain the exact equation
 

The virial theorem states that if dG/dtτ = 0, then

 

There are many reasons why the average of the time derivative might vanish, dG/dtτ = 0. One often-cited reason applies to stably-bound systems, that is to say systems that hang together forever and whose parameters are finite. In that case, velocities and coordinates of the particles of the system have upper and lower limits so that Gbound, is bounded between two extremes, Gmin and Gmax, and the average goes to zero in the limit of infinite τ:

 

Even if the average of the time derivative of G is only approximately zero, the virial theorem holds to the same degree of approximation.

For power-law forces with an exponent n, the general equation holds:

 

For gravitational attraction, n equals −1 and the average kinetic energy equals half of the average negative potential energy

 

This general result is useful for complex gravitating systems such as solar systems or galaxies.

A simple application of the virial theorem concerns galaxy clusters. If a region of space is unusually full of galaxies, it is safe to assume that they have been together for a long time, and the virial theorem can be applied. Doppler effect measurements give lower bounds for their relative velocities, and the virial theorem gives a lower bound for the total mass of the cluster, including any dark matter.

If the ergodic hypothesis holds for the system under consideration, the averaging need not be taken over time; an ensemble average can also be taken, with equivalent results.

In quantum mechanics edit

Although originally derived for classical mechanics, the virial theorem also holds for quantum mechanics, as first shown by Fock[5] using the Ehrenfest theorem.

Evaluate the commutator of the Hamiltonian

 
with the position operator Xn and the momentum operator
 
of particle n,
 

Summing over all particles, one finds for

 
the commutator amounts to
 
where   is the kinetic energy. The left-hand side of this equation is just dQ/dt, according to the Heisenberg equation of motion. The expectation value dQ/dt of this time derivative vanishes in a stationary state, leading to the quantum virial theorem,
 

Pokhozhaev's identity edit

In the field of quantum mechanics, there exists another form of the virial theorem, applicable to localized solutions to the stationary nonlinear Schrödinger equation or Klein–Gordon equation, is Pokhozhaev's identity,[6] also known as Derrick's theorem.

Let   be continuous and real-valued, with  .

Denote  . Let

 
be a solution to the equation
 
in the sense of distributions. Then   satisfies the relation
 

In special relativity edit

For a single particle in special relativity, it is not the case that T = 1/2p · v. Instead, it is true that T = (γ − 1) mc2, where γ is the Lorentz factor

 
and β = v/c. We have,
 
The last expression can be simplified to
 
. Thus, under the conditions described in earlier sections (including Newton's third law of motion, Fjk = −Fkj, despite relativity), the time average for N particles with a power law potential is
 
In particular, the ratio of kinetic energy to potential energy is no longer fixed, but necessarily falls into an interval:
 
where the more relativistic systems exhibit the larger ratios.

Examples edit

The virial theorem has a particularly simple form for periodic motion. It can be used to perform perturbative calculation for nonlinear oscillators.[7]

It can also be used to study motion in a central potential.[4] If the central potential is of the form  , the virial theorem simplifies to  .[citation needed] In particular, for gravitational or electrostatic (Coulomb) attraction,  .

Driven damped harmonic oscillator edit

Analysis based on.[7] For a one-dimensional oscillator with mass  , position  , driving force  , spring constant  , and damping coefficient  , the equation of motion is

 

When the oscillator has reached a steady state, it performs a stable oscillation  , where   is the amplitude and   is the phase angle.

Applying the virial theorem, we have  , which simplifies to  , where   is the natural frequency of the oscillator.

To solve the two unknowns, we need another equation. In steady state, the power lost per cycle is equal to the power gained per cycle:  , which simplifies to  .

Now we have two equations that yield the solution  .

Ideal gas law edit

Consider a container filled with an ideal gas consisting of point masses. The force applied to the point masses is the negative of the forces applied to the wall of the container, which is of the form  , where   is the unit normal vector pointing outwards. Then the virial theorem states

 
By the divergence theorem,  . And since the average total kinetic energy  , we have  .[8]

Dark matter edit

In 1933, Fritz Zwicky applied the virial theorem to estimate the mass of Coma Cluster, and discovered a discrepancy of mass of about 450, which he explained as due to "dark matter".[9] He refined the analysis in 1937, finding a discrepancy of about 500.[10][11]

Theoretical analysis edit

He approximated the Coma cluster as a spherical "gas" of   stars of roughly equal mass  , which gives  . The total gravitational potential energy of the cluster is  , giving  . Assuming the motion of the stars are all the same over a long enough time (ergodicity),  .

Zwicky estimated   as the gravitational potential of a uniform ball of constant density, giving  .

So by the virial theorem, the total mass of the cluster is

 

Data edit

Zwicky [9] estimated that there are   galaxies in the cluster, each having observed stellar mass   (suggested by Hubble), and the cluster has radius  . He also measured the radial velocities of the galaxies by doppler shifts in galactic spectra to be  . Assuming equipartition of kinetic energy,  .

By the virial theorem, the total mass of the cluster should be  . However, the observed mass is  , meaning the total mass is 450 times that of observed mass.

Generalizations edit

Lord Rayleigh published a generalization of the virial theorem in 1900[12] which was partially reprinted in 1903.[13] Henri Poincaré proved and applied a form of the virial theorem in 1911 to the problem of formation of the Solar System from a proto-stellar cloud (then known as cosmogony).[14] A variational form of the virial theorem was developed in 1945 by Ledoux.[15] A tensor form of the virial theorem was developed by Parker,[16] Chandrasekhar[17] and Fermi.[18] The following generalization of the virial theorem has been established by Pollard in 1964 for the case of the inverse square law:[19][20] [failed verification]

 
A boundary term otherwise must be added.[21]

Inclusion of electromagnetic fields edit

The virial theorem can be extended to include electric and magnetic fields. The result is[22]

 

where I is the moment of inertia, G is the momentum density of the electromagnetic field, T is the kinetic energy of the "fluid", U is the random "thermal" energy of the particles, WE and WM are the electric and magnetic energy content of the volume considered. Finally, pik is the fluid-pressure tensor expressed in the local moving coordinate system

 

and Tik is the electromagnetic stress tensor,

 

A plasmoid is a finite configuration of magnetic fields and plasma. With the virial theorem it is easy to see that any such configuration will expand if not contained by external forces. In a finite configuration without pressure-bearing walls or magnetic coils, the surface integral will vanish. Since all the other terms on the right hand side are positive, the acceleration of the moment of inertia will also be positive. It is also easy to estimate the expansion time τ. If a total mass M is confined within a radius R, then the moment of inertia is roughly MR2, and the left hand side of the virial theorem is MR2/τ2. The terms on the right hand side add up to about pR3, where p is the larger of the plasma pressure or the magnetic pressure. Equating these two terms and solving for τ, we find

 

where cs is the speed of the ion acoustic wave (or the Alfvén wave, if the magnetic pressure is higher than the plasma pressure). Thus the lifetime of a plasmoid is expected to be on the order of the acoustic (or Alfvén) transit time.

Relativistic uniform system edit

In case when in the physical system the pressure field, the electromagnetic and gravitational fields are taken into account, as well as the field of particles’ acceleration, the virial theorem is written in the relativistic form as follows:[23]

 

where the value WkγcT exceeds the kinetic energy of the particles T by a factor equal to the Lorentz factor γc of the particles at the center of the system. Under normal conditions we can assume that γc ≈ 1, then we can see that in the virial theorem the kinetic energy is related to the potential energy not by the coefficient 1/2, but rather by the coefficient close to 0.6. The difference from the classical case arises due to considering the pressure field and the field of particles’ acceleration inside the system, while the derivative of the scalar G is not equal to zero and should be considered as the material derivative.

An analysis of the integral theorem of generalized virial makes it possible to find, on the basis of field theory, a formula for the root-mean-square speed of typical particles of a system without using the notion of temperature:[24]

 

where   is the speed of light,   is the acceleration field constant,   is the mass density of particles,   is the current radius.

Unlike the virial theorem for particles, for the electromagnetic field the virial theorem is written as follows:[25]

 
where the energy   considered as the kinetic field energy associated with four-current  , and
 
sets the potential field energy found through the components of the electromagnetic tensor.

In astrophysics edit

The virial theorem is frequently applied in astrophysics, especially relating the gravitational potential energy of a system to its kinetic or thermal energy. Some common virial relations are [citation needed]

 
for a mass M, radius R, velocity v, and temperature T. The constants are Newton's constant G, the Boltzmann constant kB, and proton mass mp. Note that these relations are only approximate, and often the leading numerical factors (e.g. 3/5 or 1/2) are neglected entirely.

Galaxies and cosmology (virial mass and radius) edit

In astronomy, the mass and size of a galaxy (or general overdensity) is often defined in terms of the "virial mass" and "virial radius" respectively. Because galaxies and overdensities in continuous fluids can be highly extended (even to infinity in some models, such as an isothermal sphere), it can be hard to define specific, finite measures of their mass and size. The virial theorem, and related concepts, provide an often convenient means by which to quantify these properties.

In galaxy dynamics, the mass of a galaxy is often inferred by measuring the rotation velocity of its gas and stars, assuming circular Keplerian orbits. Using the virial theorem, the velocity dispersion σ can be used in a similar way. Taking the kinetic energy (per particle) of the system as T = 1/2v2 ~ 3/2σ2, and the potential energy (per particle) as U ~ 3/5 GM/R we can write

 

Here   is the radius at which the velocity dispersion is being measured, and M is the mass within that radius. The virial mass and radius are generally defined for the radius at which the velocity dispersion is a maximum, i.e.

 

As numerous approximations have been made, in addition to the approximate nature of these definitions, order-unity proportionality constants are often omitted (as in the above equations). These relations are thus only accurate in an order of magnitude sense, or when used self-consistently.

An alternate definition of the virial mass and radius is often used in cosmology where it is used to refer to the radius of a sphere, centered on a galaxy or a galaxy cluster, within which virial equilibrium holds. Since this radius is difficult to determine observationally, it is often approximated as the radius within which the average density is greater, by a specified factor, than the critical density

 
where H is the Hubble parameter and G is the gravitational constant. A common choice for the factor is 200, which corresponds roughly to the typical over-density in spherical top-hat collapse (see Virial mass), in which case the virial radius is approximated as
 
The virial mass is then defined relative to this radius as
 

Stars edit

The virial theorem is applicable to the cores of stars, by establishing a relation between gravitational potential energy and thermal kinetic energy (i.e. temperature). As stars on the main sequence convert hydrogen into helium in their cores, the mean molecular weight of the core increases and it must contract to maintain enough pressure to support its own weight. This contraction decreases its potential energy and, the virial theorem states, increases its thermal energy. The core temperature increases even as energy is lost, effectively a negative specific heat.[26] This continues beyond the main sequence, unless the core becomes degenerate since that causes the pressure to become independent of temperature and the virial relation with n equals −1 no longer holds.[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Clausius, RJE (1870). "On a Mechanical Theorem Applicable to Heat". Philosophical Magazine. Series 4. 40 (265): 122–127. doi:10.1080/14786447008640370.
  2. ^ Collins, G. W. (1978). "Introduction". The Virial Theorem in Stellar Astrophysics. Pachart Press. Bibcode:1978vtsa.book.....C. ISBN 978-0-912918-13-6.
  3. ^ Bader, R. F. W.; Beddall, P. M. (1972). "Virial Field Relationship for Molecular Charge Distributions and the Spatial Partitioning of Molecular Properties". The Journal of Chemical Physics. 56 (7): 3320–3329. Bibcode:1972JChPh..56.3320B. doi:10.1063/1.1677699.
  4. ^ a b Goldstein, Herbert (1980). Classical mechanics (2nd ed.). Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-201-02918-9. OCLC 5675073.
  5. ^ Fock, V. (1930). "Bemerkung zum Virialsatz". Zeitschrift für Physik A. 63 (11): 855–858. Bibcode:1930ZPhy...63..855F. doi:10.1007/BF01339281. S2CID 122502103.
  6. ^ Berestycki, H.; Lions, P. -L. (1983). "Nonlinear scalar field equations, I existence of a ground state". Arch. Rational Mech. Anal. 82 (4): 313–345. Bibcode:1983ArRMA..82..313B. doi:10.1007/BF00250555. S2CID 123081616.
  7. ^ a b Sivardiere, Jean (December 1986). "Using the virial theorem". American Journal of Physics. 54 (12): 1100–1103. Bibcode:1986AmJPh..54.1100S. doi:10.1119/1.14723. ISSN 0002-9505.
  8. ^ "2.11: Virial Theorem". Physics LibreTexts. 2018-03-22. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  9. ^ a b Zwicky, Fritz (1933). "The Redshift of Extragalactic Nebulae". Helvetica Physica Acta. 6. Translated by Heinz Andernach: 110–127. ISSN 0018-0238.
  10. ^ Zwicky, F. (October 1937). "On the Masses of Nebulae and of Clusters of Nebulae". The Astrophysical Journal. 86: 217. Bibcode:1937ApJ....86..217Z. doi:10.1086/143864. ISSN 0004-637X.
  11. ^ Bertone, Gianfranco; Hooper, Dan (2018-10-15). "History of dark matter". Reviews of Modern Physics. 90 (4): 045002. arXiv:1605.04909. Bibcode:2018RvMP...90d5002B. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.90.045002. ISSN 0034-6861. S2CID 18596513.
  12. ^ Lord Rayleigh (August 1900). "XV. On a theorem analogous to the virial theorem". The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. 5. 50 (303): 210–213. doi:10.1080/14786440009463903.
  13. ^ Lord Rayleigh (1903). Scientific Papers: 1892–1901. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 491–493.
  14. ^ Poincaré, Henri (1911). Leçons sur les hypothèses cosmogoniques [Lectures on Theories of Cosmogony]. Paris: Hermann. pp. 90–91 et seq.
  15. ^ Ledoux, P. (1945). "On the Radial Pulsation of Gaseous Stars". The Astrophysical Journal. 102: 143–153. Bibcode:1945ApJ...102..143L. doi:10.1086/144747.
  16. ^ Parker, E.N. (1954). "Tensor Virial Equations". Physical Review. 96 (6): 1686–1689. Bibcode:1954PhRv...96.1686P. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.96.1686.
  17. ^ Chandrasekhar, S; Lebovitz NR (1962). "The Potentials and the Superpotentials of Homogeneous Ellipsoids". Astrophys. J. 136: 1037–1047. Bibcode:1962ApJ...136.1037C. doi:10.1086/147456.
  18. ^ Chandrasekhar, S; Fermi E (1953). "Problems of Gravitational Stability in the Presence of a Magnetic Field". Astrophys. J. 118: 116. Bibcode:1953ApJ...118..116C. doi:10.1086/145732.
  19. ^ Pollard, H. (1964). "A sharp form of the virial theorem". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. LXX (5): 703–705. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1964-11175-7.
  20. ^ Pollard, Harry (1966). Mathematical Introduction to Celestial Mechanics. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice–Hall, Inc. ISBN 978-0-13-561068-8.
  21. ^ Kolár, M.; O'Shea, S. F. (July 1996). "A high-temperature approximation for the path-integral quantum Monte Carlo method". Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and General. 29 (13): 3471–3494. Bibcode:1996JPhA...29.3471K. doi:10.1088/0305-4470/29/13/018.
  22. ^ Schmidt, George (1979). Physics of High Temperature Plasmas (Second ed.). Academic Press. p. 72.
  23. ^ Fedosin, S. G. (2016). "The virial theorem and the kinetic energy of particles of a macroscopic system in the general field concept". Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics. 29 (2): 361–371. arXiv:1801.06453. Bibcode:2017CMT....29..361F. doi:10.1007/s00161-016-0536-8. S2CID 53692146.
  24. ^ Fedosin, Sergey G. (2018-09-24). "The integral theorem of generalized virial in the relativistic uniform model". Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics. 31 (3): 627–638. arXiv:1912.08683. Bibcode:2019CMT....31..627F. doi:10.1007/s00161-018-0715-x. ISSN 1432-0959. S2CID 125180719.
  25. ^ Fedosin, S.G. (2019). "The Integral Theorem of the Field Energy". Gazi University Journal of Science. 32 (2): 686–703. doi:10.5281/zenodo.3252783.
  26. ^ BAIDYANATH BASU; TANUKA CHATTOPADHYAY; SUDHINDRA NATH BISWAS (1 January 2010). AN INTRODUCTION TO ASTROPHYSICS. PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd. pp. 365–. ISBN 978-81-203-4071-8.
  27. ^ William K. Rose (16 April 1998). Advanced Stellar Astrophysics. Cambridge University Press. pp. 242–. ISBN 978-0-521-58833-1.

Further reading edit

  • Goldstein, H. (1980). Classical Mechanics (2nd ed.). Addison–Wesley. ISBN 978-0-201-02918-5.
  • Collins, G. W. (1978). The Virial Theorem in Stellar Astrophysics. Pachart Press. Bibcode:1978vtsa.book.....C. ISBN 978-0-912918-13-6.
  • i̇Pekoğlu, Y.; Turgut, S. (2016). "An elementary derivation of the quantum virial theorem from Hellmann–Feynman theorem". European Journal of Physics. 37 (4): 045405. Bibcode:2016EJPh...37d5405I. doi:10.1088/0143-0807/37/4/045405. S2CID 125030620.

External links edit

  • The Virial Theorem at MathPages
  • Gravitational Contraction and Star Formation, Georgia State University

virial, theorem, statistical, mechanics, virial, theorem, provides, general, equation, that, relates, average, over, time, total, kinetic, energy, stable, system, discrete, particles, bound, conservative, force, forces, characterized, exclusively, their, work,. In statistical mechanics the virial theorem provides a general equation that relates the average over time of the total kinetic energy of a stable system of discrete particles bound by a conservative force forces characterized exclusively by their work dubious discuss with that of the total potential energy of the system Mathematically the theorem states T 1 2 k 1 N F k r k displaystyle left langle T right rangle frac 1 2 sum k 1 N bigl langle mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k bigr rangle where T is the total kinetic energy of the N particles Fk represents the force on the k th particle which is located at position rk and angle brackets represent the average over time of the enclosed quantity The word virial for the right hand side of the equation derives from vis the Latin word for force or energy and was given its technical definition by Rudolf Clausius in 1870 1 The significance of the virial theorem is that it allows the average total kinetic energy to be calculated even for very complicated systems that defy an exact solution such as those considered in statistical mechanics this average total kinetic energy is related to the temperature of the system by the equipartition theorem However the virial theorem does not depend on the notion of temperature and holds even for systems that are not in thermal equilibrium The virial theorem has been generalized in various ways most notably to a tensor form If the force between any two particles of the system results from a potential energy V r arn that is proportional to some power n of the interparticle distance r the virial theorem takes the simple form2 T n V TOT displaystyle 2 langle T rangle n langle V text TOT rangle Thus twice the average total kinetic energy T equals n times the average total potential energy VTOT Whereas V r represents the potential energy between two particles of distance r VTOT represents the total potential energy of the system i e the sum of the potential energy V r over all pairs of particles in the system A common example of such a system is a star held together by its own gravity where n equals 1 Contents 1 History 2 Illustrative special case 3 Statement and derivation 3 1 Connection with the potential energy between particles 3 2 Special case of power law forces 3 3 Time averaging 4 In quantum mechanics 4 1 Pokhozhaev s identity 5 In special relativity 6 Examples 6 1 Driven damped harmonic oscillator 6 2 Ideal gas law 6 3 Dark matter 6 3 1 Theoretical analysis 6 3 2 Data 7 Generalizations 8 Inclusion of electromagnetic fields 9 Relativistic uniform system 10 In astrophysics 10 1 Galaxies and cosmology virial mass and radius 10 2 Stars 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory editIn 1870 Rudolf Clausius delivered the lecture On a Mechanical Theorem Applicable to Heat to the Association for Natural and Medical Sciences of the Lower Rhine following a 20 year study of thermodynamics The lecture stated that the mean vis viva of the system is equal to its virial or that the average kinetic energy is equal to 1 2 the average potential energy The virial theorem can be obtained directly from Lagrange s identity moved resource as applied in classical gravitational dynamics the original form of which was included in Lagrange s Essay on the Problem of Three Bodies published in 1772 Karl Jacobi s generalization of the identity to N bodies and to the present form of Laplace s identity closely resembles the classical virial theorem However the interpretations leading to the development of the equations were very different since at the time of development statistical dynamics had not yet unified the separate studies of thermodynamics and classical dynamics 2 The theorem was later utilized popularized generalized and further developed by James Clerk Maxwell Lord Rayleigh Henri Poincare Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar Enrico Fermi Paul Ledoux Richard Bader and Eugene Parker Fritz Zwicky was the first to use the virial theorem to deduce the existence of unseen matter which is now called dark matter Richard Bader showed the charge distribution of a total system can be partitioned into its kinetic and potential energies that obey the virial theorem 3 As another example of its many applications the virial theorem has been used to derive the Chandrasekhar limit for the stability of white dwarf stars Illustrative special case editConsider N 2 particles with equal mass m acted upon by mutually attractive forces Suppose the particles are at diametrically opposite points of a circular orbit with radius r The velocities are v1 t and v2 t v1 t which are normal to forces F1 t and F2 t F1 t The respective magnitudes are fixed at v and F The average kinetic energy of the system in an interval of time from t1 to t2 is T 1 t 2 t 1 t 1 t 2 k 1 N 1 2 m k v k t 2 d t 1 t 2 t 1 t 1 t 2 1 2 m v 1 t 2 1 2 m v 2 t 2 d t m v 2 displaystyle langle T rangle frac 1 t 2 t 1 int t 1 t 2 sum k 1 N frac 1 2 m k left mathbf v k t right 2 dt frac 1 t 2 t 1 int t 1 t 2 left frac 1 2 m mathbf v 1 t 2 frac 1 2 m mathbf v 2 t 2 right dt mv 2 nbsp Taking center of mass as the origin the particles have positions r1 t and r2 t r1 t with fixed magnitude r The attractive forces act in opposite directions as positions so F1 t r1 t F2 t r2 t Fr Applying the centripetal force formula F mv2 r results in 1 2 k 1 N F k r k 1 2 F r F r F r m v 2 r r m v 2 T displaystyle frac 1 2 sum k 1 N bigl langle mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k bigr rangle frac 1 2 Fr Fr Fr frac mv 2 r cdot r mv 2 langle T rangle nbsp as required Note If the origin is displaced then we d obtain the same result This is because the dot product of the displacement with equal and opposite forces F1 t F2 t results in net cancellation Statement and derivation editAlthough the virial theorem depends on averaging the total kinetic and potential energies the presentation here postpones the averaging to the last step For a collection of N point particles the scalar moment of inertia I about the origin is defined by the equationI k 1 N m k r k 2 k 1 N m k r k 2 displaystyle I sum k 1 N m k left mathbf r k right 2 sum k 1 N m k r k 2 nbsp where mk and rk represent the mass and position of the k th particle rk rk is the position vector magnitude The scalar G is defined by the equation G k 1 N p k r k displaystyle G sum k 1 N mathbf p k cdot mathbf r k nbsp where pk is the momentum vector of the k th particle 4 Assuming that the masses are constant G is one half the time derivative of this moment of inertia 1 2 d I d t 1 2 d d t k 1 N m k r k r k k 1 N m k d r k d t r k k 1 N p k r k G displaystyle begin aligned frac 1 2 frac dI dt amp frac 1 2 frac d dt sum k 1 N m k mathbf r k cdot mathbf r k amp sum k 1 N m k frac d mathbf r k dt cdot mathbf r k amp sum k 1 N mathbf p k cdot mathbf r k G end aligned nbsp In turn the time derivative of G can be written d G d t k 1 N p k d r k d t k 1 N d p k d t r k k 1 N m k d r k d t d r k d t k 1 N F k r k 2 T k 1 N F k r k displaystyle begin aligned frac dG dt amp sum k 1 N mathbf p k cdot frac d mathbf r k dt sum k 1 N frac d mathbf p k dt cdot mathbf r k amp sum k 1 N m k frac d mathbf r k dt cdot frac d mathbf r k dt sum k 1 N mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k amp 2T sum k 1 N mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k end aligned nbsp where mk is the mass of the k th particle Fk dpk dt is the net force on that particle and T is the total kinetic energy of the system according to the vk drk dt velocity of each particle T 1 2 k 1 N m k v k 2 1 2 k 1 N m k d r k d t d r k d t displaystyle T frac 1 2 sum k 1 N m k v k 2 frac 1 2 sum k 1 N m k frac d mathbf r k dt cdot frac d mathbf r k dt nbsp Connection with the potential energy between particles edit The total force Fk on particle k is the sum of all the forces from the other particles j in the systemF k j 1 N F j k displaystyle mathbf F k sum j 1 N mathbf F jk nbsp where Fjk is the force applied by particle j on particle k Hence the virial can be written 1 2 k 1 N F k r k 1 2 k 1 N j 1 N F j k r k displaystyle frac 1 2 sum k 1 N mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k frac 1 2 sum k 1 N sum j 1 N mathbf F jk cdot mathbf r k nbsp Since no particle acts on itself i e Fjj 0 for 1 j N we split the sum in terms below and above this diagonal and we add them together in pairs k 1 N F k r k k 1 N j 1 N F j k r k k 2 N j 1 k 1 F j k r k F k j r j k 2 N j 1 k 1 F j k r k F j k r j k 2 N j 1 k 1 F j k r k r j displaystyle begin aligned sum k 1 N mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k amp sum k 1 N sum j 1 N mathbf F jk cdot mathbf r k sum k 2 N sum j 1 k 1 left mathbf F jk cdot mathbf r k mathbf F kj cdot mathbf r j right amp sum k 2 N sum j 1 k 1 left mathbf F jk cdot mathbf r k mathbf F jk cdot mathbf r j right sum k 2 N sum j 1 k 1 mathbf F jk cdot left mathbf r k mathbf r j right end aligned nbsp where we have assumed that Newton s third law of motion holds i e Fjk Fkj equal and opposite reaction It often happens that the forces can be derived from a potential energy Vjk that is a function only of the distance rjk between the point particles j and k Since the force is the negative gradient of the potential energy we have in this caseF j k r k V j k d V j k d r j k r k r j r j k displaystyle mathbf F jk nabla mathbf r k V jk frac dV jk dr jk left frac mathbf r k mathbf r j r jk right nbsp which is equal and opposite to Fkj rjVkj rjVjk the force applied by particle k on particle j as may be confirmed by explicit calculation Hence k 1 N F k r k k 2 N j 1 k 1 F j k r k r j k 2 N j 1 k 1 d V j k d r j k r k r j 2 r j k k 2 N j 1 k 1 d V j k d r j k r j k displaystyle begin aligned sum k 1 N mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k amp sum k 2 N sum j 1 k 1 mathbf F jk cdot left mathbf r k mathbf r j right amp sum k 2 N sum j 1 k 1 frac dV jk dr jk frac mathbf r k mathbf r j 2 r jk amp sum k 2 N sum j 1 k 1 frac dV jk dr jk r jk end aligned nbsp Thus we haved G d t 2 T k 1 N F k r k 2 T k 2 N j 1 k 1 d V j k d r j k r j k displaystyle frac dG dt 2T sum k 1 N mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k 2T sum k 2 N sum j 1 k 1 frac dV jk dr jk r jk nbsp Special case of power law forces edit In a common special case the potential energy V between two particles is proportional to a power n of their distance rijV j k a r j k n displaystyle V jk alpha r jk n nbsp where the coefficient a and the exponent n are constants In such cases the virial is given by the equation 1 2 k 1 N F k r k 1 2 k 1 N j lt k d V j k d r j k r j k 1 2 k 1 N j lt k n a r j k n 1 r j k 1 2 k 1 N j lt k n V j k n 2 V TOT displaystyle begin aligned frac 1 2 sum k 1 N mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k amp frac 1 2 sum k 1 N sum j lt k frac dV jk dr jk r jk amp frac 1 2 sum k 1 N sum j lt k n alpha r jk n 1 r jk amp frac 1 2 sum k 1 N sum j lt k nV jk frac n 2 V text TOT end aligned nbsp where VTOT is the total potential energy of the system V TOT k 1 N j lt k V j k displaystyle V text TOT sum k 1 N sum j lt k V jk nbsp Thus we haved G d t 2 T k 1 N F k r k 2 T n V TOT displaystyle frac dG dt 2T sum k 1 N mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k 2T nV text TOT nbsp For gravitating systems the exponent n equals 1 giving Lagrange s identityd G d t 1 2 d 2 I d t 2 2 T V TOT displaystyle frac dG dt frac 1 2 frac d 2 I dt 2 2T V text TOT nbsp which was derived by Joseph Louis Lagrange and extended by Carl Jacobi Time averaging edit The average of this derivative over a duration of time t is defined as d G d t t 1 t 0 t d G d t d t 1 t G 0 G t d G G t G 0 t displaystyle left langle frac dG dt right rangle tau frac 1 tau int 0 tau frac dG dt dt frac 1 tau int G 0 G tau dG frac G tau G 0 tau nbsp from which we obtain the exact equation d G d t t 2 T t k 1 N F k r k t displaystyle left langle frac dG dt right rangle tau 2 left langle T right rangle tau sum k 1 N left langle mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k right rangle tau nbsp The virial theorem states that if dG dt t 0 then2 T t k 1 N F k r k t displaystyle 2 left langle T right rangle tau sum k 1 N left langle mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k right rangle tau nbsp There are many reasons why the average of the time derivative might vanish dG dt t 0 One often cited reason applies to stably bound systems that is to say systems that hang together forever and whose parameters are finite In that case velocities and coordinates of the particles of the system have upper and lower limits so that Gbound is bounded between two extremes Gmin and Gmax and the average goes to zero in the limit of infinite t lim t d G b o u n d d t t lim t G t G 0 t lim t G max G min t 0 displaystyle lim tau to infty left left langle frac dG mathrm bound dt right rangle tau right lim tau to infty left frac G tau G 0 tau right leq lim tau to infty frac G max G min tau 0 nbsp Even if the average of the time derivative of G is only approximately zero the virial theorem holds to the same degree of approximation For power law forces with an exponent n the general equation holds T t 1 2 k 1 N F k r k t n 2 V TOT t displaystyle langle T rangle tau frac 1 2 sum k 1 N langle mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k rangle tau frac n 2 langle V text TOT rangle tau nbsp For gravitational attraction n equals 1 and the average kinetic energy equals half of the average negative potential energy T t 1 2 V TOT t displaystyle langle T rangle tau frac 1 2 langle V text TOT rangle tau nbsp This general result is useful for complex gravitating systems such as solar systems or galaxies A simple application of the virial theorem concerns galaxy clusters If a region of space is unusually full of galaxies it is safe to assume that they have been together for a long time and the virial theorem can be applied Doppler effect measurements give lower bounds for their relative velocities and the virial theorem gives a lower bound for the total mass of the cluster including any dark matter If the ergodic hypothesis holds for the system under consideration the averaging need not be taken over time an ensemble average can also be taken with equivalent results In quantum mechanics editAlthough originally derived for classical mechanics the virial theorem also holds for quantum mechanics as first shown by Fock 5 using the Ehrenfest theorem Evaluate the commutator of the HamiltonianH V X i n P n 2 2 m displaystyle H V bigl X i bigr sum n frac P n 2 2m nbsp with the position operator Xn and the momentum operator P n i ℏ d d X n displaystyle P n i hbar frac d dX n nbsp of particle n H X n P n X n H P n H X n P n i ℏ X n d V d X n i ℏ P n 2 m displaystyle H X n P n X n H P n H X n P n i hbar X n frac dV dX n i hbar frac P n 2 m nbsp Summing over all particles one finds forQ n X n P n displaystyle Q sum n X n P n nbsp the commutator amounts to i ℏ H Q 2 T n X n d V d X n displaystyle frac i hbar H Q 2T sum n X n frac dV dX n nbsp where T n P n 2 2 m textstyle T sum n frac P n 2 2m nbsp is the kinetic energy The left hand side of this equation is just dQ dt according to the Heisenberg equation of motion The expectation value dQ dt of this time derivative vanishes in a stationary state leading to the quantum virial theorem 2 T n X n d V d X n displaystyle 2 langle T rangle sum n left langle X n frac dV dX n right rangle nbsp Pokhozhaev s identity edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message In the field of quantum mechanics there exists another form of the virial theorem applicable to localized solutions to the stationary nonlinear Schrodinger equation or Klein Gordon equation is Pokhozhaev s identity 6 also known as Derrick s theorem Let g s displaystyle g s nbsp be continuous and real valued with g 0 0 displaystyle g 0 0 nbsp Denote G s 0 s g t d t textstyle G s int 0 s g t dt nbsp Letu L l o c R n u L 2 R n G u L 1 R n n N displaystyle u in L mathrm loc infty mathbb R n qquad nabla u in L 2 mathbb R n qquad G u cdot in L 1 mathbb R n qquad n in mathbb N nbsp be a solution to the equation 2 u g u displaystyle nabla 2 u g u nbsp in the sense of distributions Then u displaystyle u nbsp satisfies the relation n 2 2 R n u x 2 d x n R n G u x d x displaystyle left frac n 2 2 right int mathbb R n nabla u x 2 dx n int mathbb R n G u x dx nbsp In special relativity editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message For a single particle in special relativity it is not the case that T 1 2 p v Instead it is true that T g 1 mc2 where g is the Lorentz factorg 1 1 v 2 c 2 displaystyle gamma frac 1 sqrt 1 frac v 2 c 2 nbsp and b v c We have 1 2 p v 1 2 b g m c b c 1 2 g b 2 m c 2 g b 2 2 g 1 T displaystyle begin aligned frac 1 2 mathbf p cdot mathbf v amp frac 1 2 boldsymbol beta gamma mc cdot boldsymbol beta c 5pt amp frac 1 2 gamma beta 2 mc 2 5pt amp left frac gamma beta 2 2 gamma 1 right T end aligned nbsp The last expression can be simplified to 1 1 b 2 2 T or g 1 2 g T displaystyle left frac 1 sqrt 1 beta 2 2 right T qquad text or qquad left frac gamma 1 2 gamma right T nbsp Thus under the conditions described in earlier sections including Newton s third law of motion Fjk Fkj despite relativity the time average for N particles with a power law potential is n 2 V T O T t k 1 N 1 1 b k 2 2 T k t k 1 N g k 1 2 g k T k t displaystyle frac n 2 left langle V mathrm TOT right rangle tau left langle sum k 1 N left frac 1 sqrt 1 beta k 2 2 right T k right rangle tau left langle sum k 1 N left frac gamma k 1 2 gamma k right T k right rangle tau nbsp In particular the ratio of kinetic energy to potential energy is no longer fixed but necessarily falls into an interval 2 T T O T n V T O T 1 2 displaystyle frac 2 langle T mathrm TOT rangle n langle V mathrm TOT rangle in left 1 2 right nbsp where the more relativistic systems exhibit the larger ratios Examples editThe virial theorem has a particularly simple form for periodic motion It can be used to perform perturbative calculation for nonlinear oscillators 7 It can also be used to study motion in a central potential 4 If the central potential is of the form U r n displaystyle U propto r n nbsp the virial theorem simplifies to T n 1 2 U displaystyle langle T rangle frac n 1 2 langle U rangle nbsp citation needed In particular for gravitational or electrostatic Coulomb attraction T 1 2 U displaystyle langle T rangle frac 1 2 langle U rangle nbsp Driven damped harmonic oscillator edit Analysis based on 7 For a one dimensional oscillator with mass m displaystyle m nbsp position x displaystyle x nbsp driving force F cos w t displaystyle F cos omega t nbsp spring constant k displaystyle k nbsp and damping coefficient g displaystyle gamma nbsp the equation of motion ism d 2 x d t 2 acceleration k x spring g d x d t friction F cos w t external driving displaystyle m underbrace frac d 2 x dt 2 text acceleration underbrace kx text spring underbrace gamma frac dx dt text friction underbrace F cos omega t text external driving nbsp When the oscillator has reached a steady state it performs a stable oscillation x X cos w t f displaystyle x X cos omega t varphi nbsp where X displaystyle X nbsp is the amplitude and f displaystyle varphi nbsp is the phase angle Applying the virial theorem we have m x x k x x g x x F cos w t x displaystyle m langle dot x dot x rangle k langle xx rangle gamma langle x dot x rangle F langle cos omega t x rangle nbsp which simplifies to F cos f m w 0 2 w 2 X displaystyle F cos varphi m omega 0 2 omega 2 X nbsp where w 0 k m displaystyle omega 0 sqrt k m nbsp is the natural frequency of the oscillator To solve the two unknowns we need another equation In steady state the power lost per cycle is equal to the power gained per cycle x g x power dissipated x F cos w t power input displaystyle underbrace langle dot x gamma dot x rangle text power dissipated underbrace langle dot x F cos omega t rangle text power input nbsp which simplifies to sin f g X w F displaystyle sin varphi frac gamma X omega F nbsp Now we have two equations that yield the solution X F 2 g 2 w 2 m 2 w 0 2 w 2 2 tan f g w m w 0 2 w 2 displaystyle begin cases X amp sqrt frac F 2 gamma 2 omega 2 m 2 omega 0 2 omega 2 2 tan varphi amp frac gamma omega m omega 0 2 omega 2 end cases nbsp Ideal gas law edit Consider a container filled with an ideal gas consisting of point masses The force applied to the point masses is the negative of the forces applied to the wall of the container which is of the form d F n P d A displaystyle d mathbf F mathbf hat n PdA nbsp where n displaystyle mathbf hat n nbsp is the unit normal vector pointing outwards Then the virial theorem states T 1 2 i F i r i P 2 n r d A displaystyle langle T rangle frac 1 2 Bigg langle sum i mathbf F i cdot mathbf r i Bigg rangle frac P 2 int mathbf hat n cdot mathbf r dA nbsp By the divergence theorem n r d A r d V 3 d V 3 V textstyle int mathbf hat n cdot mathbf r dA int nabla cdot mathbf r dV 3 int dV 3V nbsp And since the average total kinetic energy T N 1 2 m v 2 N 3 2 k T textstyle langle T rangle N langle frac 1 2 mv 2 rangle N cdot frac 3 2 kT nbsp we have P V N k T displaystyle PV NkT nbsp 8 Dark matter edit In 1933 Fritz Zwicky applied the virial theorem to estimate the mass of Coma Cluster and discovered a discrepancy of mass of about 450 which he explained as due to dark matter 9 He refined the analysis in 1937 finding a discrepancy of about 500 10 11 Theoretical analysis edit He approximated the Coma cluster as a spherical gas of N displaystyle N nbsp stars of roughly equal mass m displaystyle m nbsp which gives T 1 2 N m v 2 textstyle langle T rangle frac 1 2 Nm langle v 2 rangle nbsp The total gravitational potential energy of the cluster is U i lt j G m 2 r i j displaystyle U sum i lt j frac Gm 2 r i j nbsp giving U G m 2 i lt j 1 r i j textstyle langle U rangle Gm 2 sum i lt j langle 1 r i j rangle nbsp Assuming the motion of the stars are all the same over a long enough time ergodicity U 1 2 N 2 G m 2 1 r textstyle langle U rangle frac 1 2 N 2 Gm 2 langle 1 r rangle nbsp Zwicky estimated U displaystyle langle U rangle nbsp as the gravitational potential of a uniform ball of constant density giving U 3 5 G N 2 m 2 R textstyle langle U rangle frac 3 5 frac GN 2 m 2 R nbsp So by the virial theorem the total mass of the cluster isN m 5 v 2 3 G 1 r displaystyle Nm frac 5 langle v 2 rangle 3G langle frac 1 r rangle nbsp Data edit Zwicky1933 displaystyle 1933 nbsp 9 estimated that there are N 800 displaystyle N 800 nbsp galaxies in the cluster each having observed stellar mass m 10 9 M displaystyle m 10 9 M odot nbsp suggested by Hubble and the cluster has radius R 10 6 ly displaystyle R 10 6 text ly nbsp He also measured the radial velocities of the galaxies by doppler shifts in galactic spectra to be v r 2 1000 km s 2 displaystyle langle v r 2 rangle 1000 text km s 2 nbsp Assuming equipartition of kinetic energy v 2 3 v r 2 displaystyle langle v 2 rangle 3 langle v r 2 rangle nbsp By the virial theorem the total mass of the cluster should be 5 R v r 2 G 3 6 10 14 M displaystyle frac 5R langle v r 2 rangle G approx 3 6 times 10 14 M odot nbsp However the observed mass is N m 8 10 11 M displaystyle Nm 8 times 10 11 M odot nbsp meaning the total mass is 450 times that of observed mass Generalizations editLord Rayleigh published a generalization of the virial theorem in 1900 12 which was partially reprinted in 1903 13 Henri Poincare proved and applied a form of the virial theorem in 1911 to the problem of formation of the Solar System from a proto stellar cloud then known as cosmogony 14 A variational form of the virial theorem was developed in 1945 by Ledoux 15 A tensor form of the virial theorem was developed by Parker 16 Chandrasekhar 17 and Fermi 18 The following generalization of the virial theorem has been established by Pollard in 1964 for the case of the inverse square law 19 20 failed verification 2 lim t T t lim t U t if and only if lim t t 2 I t 0 displaystyle 2 lim tau to infty langle T rangle tau lim tau to infty langle U rangle tau qquad text if and only if quad lim tau to infty tau 2 I tau 0 nbsp A boundary term otherwise must be added 21 Inclusion of electromagnetic fields editThe virial theorem can be extended to include electric and magnetic fields The result is 22 1 2 d 2 I d t 2 V x k G k t d 3 r 2 T U W E W M x k p i k T i k d S i displaystyle frac 1 2 frac d 2 I dt 2 int V x k frac partial G k partial t d 3 r 2 T U W mathrm E W mathrm M int x k p ik T ik dS i nbsp where I is the moment of inertia G is the momentum density of the electromagnetic field T is the kinetic energy of the fluid U is the random thermal energy of the particles WE and WM are the electric and magnetic energy content of the volume considered Finally pik is the fluid pressure tensor expressed in the local moving coordinate systemp i k S n s m s v i v k s V i V k S m s n s displaystyle p ik Sigma n sigma m sigma langle v i v k rangle sigma V i V k Sigma m sigma n sigma nbsp and Tik is the electromagnetic stress tensor T i k e 0 E 2 2 B 2 2 m 0 d i k e 0 E i E k B i B k m 0 displaystyle T ik left frac varepsilon 0 E 2 2 frac B 2 2 mu 0 right delta ik left varepsilon 0 E i E k frac B i B k mu 0 right nbsp A plasmoid is a finite configuration of magnetic fields and plasma With the virial theorem it is easy to see that any such configuration will expand if not contained by external forces In a finite configuration without pressure bearing walls or magnetic coils the surface integral will vanish Since all the other terms on the right hand side are positive the acceleration of the moment of inertia will also be positive It is also easy to estimate the expansion time t If a total mass M is confined within a radius R then the moment of inertia is roughly MR2 and the left hand side of the virial theorem is MR2 t2 The terms on the right hand side add up to about pR3 where p is the larger of the plasma pressure or the magnetic pressure Equating these two terms and solving for t we findt R c s displaystyle tau sim frac R c mathrm s nbsp where cs is the speed of the ion acoustic wave or the Alfven wave if the magnetic pressure is higher than the plasma pressure Thus the lifetime of a plasmoid is expected to be on the order of the acoustic or Alfven transit time Relativistic uniform system editIn case when in the physical system the pressure field the electromagnetic and gravitational fields are taken into account as well as the field of particles acceleration the virial theorem is written in the relativistic form as follows 23 W k 0 6 k 1 N F k r k displaystyle left langle W k right rangle approx 0 6 sum k 1 N langle mathbf F k cdot mathbf r k rangle nbsp where the value Wk gcT exceeds the kinetic energy of the particles T by a factor equal to the Lorentz factor gc of the particles at the center of the system Under normal conditions we can assume that gc 1 then we can see that in the virial theorem the kinetic energy is related to the potential energy not by the coefficient 1 2 but rather by the coefficient close to 0 6 The difference from the classical case arises due to considering the pressure field and the field of particles acceleration inside the system while the derivative of the scalar G is not equal to zero and should be considered as the material derivative An analysis of the integral theorem of generalized virial makes it possible to find on the basis of field theory a formula for the root mean square speed of typical particles of a system without using the notion of temperature 24 v r m s c 1 4 p h r 0 r 2 c 2 g c 2 sin 2 r c 4 p h r 0 displaystyle v mathrm rms c sqrt 1 frac 4 pi eta rho 0 r 2 c 2 gamma c 2 sin 2 left frac r c sqrt 4 pi eta rho 0 right nbsp where c displaystyle c nbsp is the speed of light h displaystyle eta nbsp is the acceleration field constant r 0 displaystyle rho 0 nbsp is the mass density of particles r displaystyle r nbsp is the current radius Unlike the virial theorem for particles for the electromagnetic field the virial theorem is written as follows 25 E k f 2 W f 0 displaystyle E kf 2W f 0 nbsp where the energy E k f A a j a g d x 1 d x 2 d x 3 textstyle E kf int A alpha j alpha sqrt g dx 1 dx 2 dx 3 nbsp considered as the kinetic field energy associated with four current j a displaystyle j alpha nbsp and W f 1 4 m 0 F a b F a b g d x 1 d x 2 d x 3 displaystyle W f frac 1 4 mu 0 int F alpha beta F alpha beta sqrt g dx 1 dx 2 dx 3 nbsp sets the potential field energy found through the components of the electromagnetic tensor In astrophysics editThe virial theorem is frequently applied in astrophysics especially relating the gravitational potential energy of a system to its kinetic or thermal energy Some common virial relations are citation needed 3 5 G M R 3 2 k B T m p 1 2 v 2 displaystyle frac 3 5 frac GM R frac 3 2 frac k mathrm B T m mathrm p frac 1 2 v 2 nbsp for a mass M radius R velocity v and temperature T The constants are Newton s constant G the Boltzmann constant kB and proton mass mp Note that these relations are only approximate and often the leading numerical factors e g 3 5 or 1 2 are neglected entirely Galaxies and cosmology virial mass and radius edit Main article Virial mass In astronomy the mass and size of a galaxy or general overdensity is often defined in terms of the virial mass and virial radius respectively Because galaxies and overdensities in continuous fluids can be highly extended even to infinity in some models such as an isothermal sphere it can be hard to define specific finite measures of their mass and size The virial theorem and related concepts provide an often convenient means by which to quantify these properties In galaxy dynamics the mass of a galaxy is often inferred by measuring the rotation velocity of its gas and stars assuming circular Keplerian orbits Using the virial theorem the velocity dispersion s can be used in a similar way Taking the kinetic energy per particle of the system as T 1 2 v2 3 2 s2 and the potential energy per particle as U 3 5 GM R we can writeG M R s 2 displaystyle frac GM R approx sigma 2 nbsp Here R displaystyle R nbsp is the radius at which the velocity dispersion is being measured and M is the mass within that radius The virial mass and radius are generally defined for the radius at which the velocity dispersion is a maximum i e G M vir R vir s max 2 displaystyle frac GM text vir R text vir approx sigma max 2 nbsp As numerous approximations have been made in addition to the approximate nature of these definitions order unity proportionality constants are often omitted as in the above equations These relations are thus only accurate in an order of magnitude sense or when used self consistently An alternate definition of the virial mass and radius is often used in cosmology where it is used to refer to the radius of a sphere centered on a galaxy or a galaxy cluster within which virial equilibrium holds Since this radius is difficult to determine observationally it is often approximated as the radius within which the average density is greater by a specified factor than the critical densityr crit 3 H 2 8 p G displaystyle rho text crit frac 3H 2 8 pi G nbsp where H is the Hubble parameter and G is the gravitational constant A common choice for the factor is 200 which corresponds roughly to the typical over density in spherical top hat collapse see Virial mass in which case the virial radius is approximated as r vir r 200 r r 200 r crit displaystyle r text vir approx r 200 r qquad rho 200 cdot rho text crit nbsp The virial mass is then defined relative to this radius as M vir M 200 4 3 p r 200 3 200 r crit displaystyle M text vir approx M 200 frac 4 3 pi r 200 3 cdot 200 rho text crit nbsp Stars edit The virial theorem is applicable to the cores of stars by establishing a relation between gravitational potential energy and thermal kinetic energy i e temperature As stars on the main sequence convert hydrogen into helium in their cores the mean molecular weight of the core increases and it must contract to maintain enough pressure to support its own weight This contraction decreases its potential energy and the virial theorem states increases its thermal energy The core temperature increases even as energy is lost effectively a negative specific heat 26 This continues beyond the main sequence unless the core becomes degenerate since that causes the pressure to become independent of temperature and the virial relation with n equals 1 no longer holds 27 See also editVirial coefficient Virial stress Virial mass Chandrasekhar tensor Chandrasekhar virial equations Derrick s theorem Equipartition theorem Ehrenfest theorem Pokhozhaev s identityReferences edit Clausius RJE 1870 On a Mechanical Theorem Applicable to Heat Philosophical Magazine Series 4 40 265 122 127 doi 10 1080 14786447008640370 Collins G W 1978 Introduction The Virial Theorem in Stellar Astrophysics Pachart Press Bibcode 1978vtsa book C ISBN 978 0 912918 13 6 Bader R F W Beddall P M 1972 Virial Field Relationship for Molecular Charge Distributions and the Spatial Partitioning of Molecular Properties The Journal of Chemical Physics 56 7 3320 3329 Bibcode 1972JChPh 56 3320B doi 10 1063 1 1677699 a b Goldstein Herbert 1980 Classical mechanics 2nd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 0 201 02918 9 OCLC 5675073 Fock V 1930 Bemerkung zum Virialsatz Zeitschrift fur Physik A 63 11 855 858 Bibcode 1930ZPhy 63 855F doi 10 1007 BF01339281 S2CID 122502103 Berestycki H Lions P L 1983 Nonlinear scalar field equations I existence of a ground state Arch Rational Mech Anal 82 4 313 345 Bibcode 1983ArRMA 82 313B doi 10 1007 BF00250555 S2CID 123081616 a b Sivardiere Jean December 1986 Using the virial theorem American Journal of Physics 54 12 1100 1103 Bibcode 1986AmJPh 54 1100S doi 10 1119 1 14723 ISSN 0002 9505 2 11 Virial Theorem Physics LibreTexts 2018 03 22 Retrieved 2023 06 07 a b Zwicky Fritz 1933 The Redshift of Extragalactic Nebulae Helvetica Physica Acta 6 Translated by Heinz Andernach 110 127 ISSN 0018 0238 Zwicky F October 1937 On the Masses of Nebulae and of Clusters of Nebulae The Astrophysical Journal 86 217 Bibcode 1937ApJ 86 217Z doi 10 1086 143864 ISSN 0004 637X Bertone Gianfranco Hooper Dan 2018 10 15 History of dark matter Reviews of Modern Physics 90 4 045002 arXiv 1605 04909 Bibcode 2018RvMP 90d5002B doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 90 045002 ISSN 0034 6861 S2CID 18596513 Lord Rayleigh August 1900 XV On a theorem analogous to the virial theorem The London Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science 5 50 303 210 213 doi 10 1080 14786440009463903 Lord Rayleigh 1903 Scientific Papers 1892 1901 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 491 493 Poincare Henri 1911 Lecons sur les hypotheses cosmogoniques Lectures on Theories of Cosmogony Paris Hermann pp 90 91 et seq Ledoux P 1945 On the Radial Pulsation of Gaseous Stars The Astrophysical Journal 102 143 153 Bibcode 1945ApJ 102 143L doi 10 1086 144747 Parker E N 1954 Tensor Virial Equations Physical Review 96 6 1686 1689 Bibcode 1954PhRv 96 1686P doi 10 1103 PhysRev 96 1686 Chandrasekhar S Lebovitz NR 1962 The Potentials and the Superpotentials of Homogeneous Ellipsoids Astrophys J 136 1037 1047 Bibcode 1962ApJ 136 1037C doi 10 1086 147456 Chandrasekhar S Fermi E 1953 Problems of Gravitational Stability in the Presence of a Magnetic Field Astrophys J 118 116 Bibcode 1953ApJ 118 116C doi 10 1086 145732 Pollard H 1964 A sharp form of the virial theorem Bull Amer Math Soc LXX 5 703 705 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1964 11175 7 Pollard Harry 1966 Mathematical Introduction to Celestial Mechanics Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall Inc ISBN 978 0 13 561068 8 Kolar M O Shea S F July 1996 A high temperature approximation for the path integral quantum Monte Carlo method Journal of Physics A Mathematical and General 29 13 3471 3494 Bibcode 1996JPhA 29 3471K doi 10 1088 0305 4470 29 13 018 Schmidt George 1979 Physics of High Temperature Plasmas Second ed Academic Press p 72 Fedosin S G 2016 The virial theorem and the kinetic energy of particles of a macroscopic system in the general field concept Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics 29 2 361 371 arXiv 1801 06453 Bibcode 2017CMT 29 361F doi 10 1007 s00161 016 0536 8 S2CID 53692146 Fedosin Sergey G 2018 09 24 The integral theorem of generalized virial in the relativistic uniform model Continuum Mechanics and Thermodynamics 31 3 627 638 arXiv 1912 08683 Bibcode 2019CMT 31 627F doi 10 1007 s00161 018 0715 x ISSN 1432 0959 S2CID 125180719 Fedosin S G 2019 The Integral Theorem of the Field Energy Gazi University Journal of Science 32 2 686 703 doi 10 5281 zenodo 3252783 BAIDYANATH BASU TANUKA CHATTOPADHYAY SUDHINDRA NATH BISWAS 1 January 2010 AN INTRODUCTION TO ASTROPHYSICS PHI Learning Pvt Ltd pp 365 ISBN 978 81 203 4071 8 William K Rose 16 April 1998 Advanced Stellar Astrophysics Cambridge University Press pp 242 ISBN 978 0 521 58833 1 Further reading editGoldstein H 1980 Classical Mechanics 2nd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 02918 5 Collins G W 1978 The Virial Theorem in Stellar Astrophysics Pachart Press Bibcode 1978vtsa book C ISBN 978 0 912918 13 6 i Pekoglu Y Turgut S 2016 An elementary derivation of the quantum virial theorem from Hellmann Feynman theorem European Journal of Physics 37 4 045405 Bibcode 2016EJPh 37d5405I doi 10 1088 0143 0807 37 4 045405 S2CID 125030620 External links editThe Virial Theorem at MathPages Gravitational Contraction and Star Formation Georgia State University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Virial theorem amp oldid 1222668922, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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