English

Orbital Instabilities in a Triaxial Cusp Potential

Astrophysics 2009-11-13 v1

Abstract

This paper constructs an analytic form for a triaxial potential that describes the dynamics of a wide variety of astrophysical systems, including the inner portions of dark matter halos, the central regions of galactic bulges, and young embedded star clusters. Specifically, this potential results from a density profile of the form ρ(m)m1\rho (m) \propto m^{-1}, where the radial coordinate is generalized to triaxial form so that m2=x2/a2+y2/b2+z2/c2m^2 = x^2/a^2 + y^2/b^2 + z^2/c^2 . Using the resulting analytic form of the potential, and the corresponding force laws, we construct orbit solutions and show that a robust orbit instability exists in these systems. For orbits initially confined to any of the three principal planes, the motion in the perpendicular direction can be unstable. We discuss the range of parameter space for which these orbits are unstable, find the growth rates and saturation levels of the instability, and develop a set of analytic model equations that elucidate the essential physics of the instability mechanism. This orbit instability has a large number of astrophysical implications and applications, including understanding the formation of dark matter halos, the structure of galactic bulges, the survival of tidal streams, and the early evolution of embedded star clusters.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0708.3101,
  title  = {Orbital Instabilities in a Triaxial Cusp Potential},
  author = {Fred C. Adams and Anthony M. Bloch and Suzanne C. Butler and Jeffrey M. Druce and Jacob A. Ketchum},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0708.3101},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

50 pages, accepted for publication in ApJ

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