English

Relativistic Variable Eddington Factor

High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena 2015-05-13 v1

Abstract

We analytically derive a relativistic variable Eddington factor in the relativistic radiative flow, and found that the Eddington factor depends on the {\it velocity gradient} as well as the flow velocity. When the gaseous flow is accelerated and there is a velocity gradient, there also exists a density gradient. As a result, an unobstructed viewing range by a comoving observer, where the optical depth measured from the comoving observer is unity, is not a sphere, but becomes an oval shape elongated in the direction of the flow; we call it a {\it one-tau photo-oval}. For the comoving observer, an inner wall of the photo-oval generally emits at a non-uniform intensity, and has a relative velocity. Thus, the comoving radiation fields observed by the comoving observer becomes {\it anisotropic}, and the Eddington factor must deviate from the value for the isotropic radiation fields. % In the case of a plane-parallel vertical flow, we examine the photo-oval and obtain the Eddington factor. In the sufficiently optically thick linear regime, the Eddington factor is analytically expressed as f(τ,β,dβdτ)=1/3(1+16/15dβdτ)f (\tau, \beta, \frac{d\beta}{d\tau}) = {1/3} (1 + {16/15} \frac{d\beta}{d\tau}), where τ\tau is the optical depth and β\beta (=v/c=v/c) is the flow speed normalized by the speed of light. %i.e., the Eddington factor depends on the velocity gradient. We also examine the linear and semi-linear regimes, and found that the Eddington factor generally depends both on the velocity and its gradient.

Cite

@article{arxiv.0904.2803,
  title  = {Relativistic Variable Eddington Factor},
  author = {J. Fukue},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0904.2803},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

9 pages, 9 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:52:42.516Z