Artículos de revistas
Spatial structure of regular and chaotic orbits in a self-consistent triaxial stellar system
Fecha
2005-03Registro en:
Muzzio, Juan Carlos; Carpintero, Daniel Diego; Wachlin, Felipe Carlos; Spatial structure of regular and chaotic orbits in a self-consistent triaxial stellar system; Springer; Celestial Mechanics & Dynamical Astronomy; 91; 1-2; 3-2005; 173-190
0923-2958
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Muzzio, Juan Carlos
Carpintero, Daniel Diego
Wachlin, Felipe Carlos
Resumen
We created a triaxial stellar system through the cold dissipationless collapse of 100,000 particles whose evolution was followed with a multipolar code. Once an equilibrium system had been obtained, the multipolar expansion was freezed and smoothed in order to get a stationary smooth potential. The resulting model was self-consistent and the orbits and Lyapunov exponents could then be computed for a randomly selected sample of 3472 of the bodies that make up the system. More than half of the orbits (52.7 % ) turned out to be chaotic. Regular orbits were then classified using the frequency analysis automatic code of Carpintero and Aguilar (1998, MNRAS 298(1), 1-21). We present plots of the distributions of the different kinds of orbits projected on the symmetry planes of the system. We distinguish chaotic orbits with only one non-zero Lyapunov exponent from those with two non-zero exponents and show that their spatial distributions differ, that of the former being more similar to the one of the regular orbits. Most of the regular orbits are boxes and boxlets, but the minor axis tubes play an important role filling in the wasp waists of the boxes and helping to give a lentil shape to the system. We see no problem in building stable triaxial models with substantial amounts of chaotic orbits; the difficulties found by other authors may be due not to a physical cause but to a limitation of Schwarzschild's method. © 2005 Springer.