Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the first edition
- Preface to the second edition
- Preface to the third edition
- 1 ACCRETION AS A SOURCE OF ENERGY
- 2 GAS DYNAMICS
- 3 PLASMA CONCEPTS
- 4 ACCRETION IN BINARY SYSTEMS
- 5 ACCRETION DISCS
- 6 ACCRETION ON TO A COMPACT OBJECT
- 7 ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI
- 8 ACCRETION DISCS IN ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI
- 9 ACCRETION POWER IN ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI
- 10 THICK DISCS
- 11 ACCRETION FLOWS
- Appendix: Radiation processes
- Problems
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - GAS DYNAMICS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the first edition
- Preface to the second edition
- Preface to the third edition
- 1 ACCRETION AS A SOURCE OF ENERGY
- 2 GAS DYNAMICS
- 3 PLASMA CONCEPTS
- 4 ACCRETION IN BINARY SYSTEMS
- 5 ACCRETION DISCS
- 6 ACCRETION ON TO A COMPACT OBJECT
- 7 ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI
- 8 ACCRETION DISCS IN ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI
- 9 ACCRETION POWER IN ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI
- 10 THICK DISCS
- 11 ACCRETION FLOWS
- Appendix: Radiation processes
- Problems
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Introduction
All accreting matter, like most of the material in the Universe, is in a gaseous form. This means that the constituent particles, usually free electrons and various species of ions, in teract directly only by collisions, rather than by more complicated short-range forces. In fact, these collisions involve the electrostatic interaction of the particles and will be considered in more detail in Chapter 3. On average, a gas particle will travel a certain distance, the mean free path, λ, before changing its state of motion by colliding with another particle. If the gas is approximately uniform over lengthscales exceeding a few mean free paths, the effect of all these collisions is to randomize the particle velocities about some mean velocity, the velocity of the gas, v. Viewed in a reference frame moving with velocity v, the particles have a Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution of velocities, and can be described by a temperature T. Provided we are interested only in lengthscales L ≫ λ we can regard the gas as a continuous fluid, having velocity v, temp erature T and density ρ defined at each point. We then study the behaviour of these and other fluid variables as functions of position and time by imposing the laws of conservation of mass, momentum and energy. This is the subject of gas dynamics. If we wish to look more closely at the gas, we have to consider the particle interactions in more detail; this is the domain of plasma physics, or, more strictly, plasma kinetic theory, about which we shall have something to say in Chapter 3.
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- Information
- Accretion Power in Astrophysics , pp. 8 - 22Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002