dc.creatorCora, Sofía Alejandra
dc.creatorVergne, María Marcela
dc.creatorMuzzio, Juan Carlos
dc.date1999
dc.date2021-08-20T18:38:01Z
dc.date.accessioned2023-07-15T02:45:00Z
dc.date.available2023-07-15T02:45:00Z
dc.identifierhttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/123080
dc.identifierissn:0252-9211
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/7463132
dc.descriptionWhen a body moves through a medium of smaller particles, it suffers a deceleration due to dynamical friction (Chandrasekhar 1943). Dynamical friction is inversely proportional to the relaxation time, which can be defined as the time needed for the orbits to experiment an energy exchange of the order of their initial energies, as a result of the perturbations produced by stellar encounters. Chaotic orbits, present in non-integrable systems, have exponential sensitivity to perturbations, a feature that makes them to relax in a time much shorter than regular ones, which suggests that dynamical friction would increase in the presence of chaotic orbits (Pfenniger 1986). We present preliminary results of numerical experiments used to check this idea, investigating the orbital decay, caused by dynamical friction, of a rigid satellite which moves within a larger stellar system (a galaxy) whose potential is non-integrable. Triaxial models with similar density distributions but different percentages of chaotic orbits are considered. This last quantity depends on the central concentration of the models. If the potential corresponds to triaxial mass models with smooth cores, the regular orbits have shapes that can be identified with one of the four families of regular orbits in Stackel potentials (box and three types of tubes). Chaotic orbits behave very much like regular orbits for hundreds of oscillations at least. In this case, the galaxy is represented by the triaxial generalization of the γ-models with γ = 0 (Merritt & Fridman 1996). However, the situation is very different in triaxial models with divergent central densities (cusps) or black holes, a feature that is in agreement with the observations.
dc.descriptionFacultad de Ciencias Astronómicas y Geofísicas
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.format399-400
dc.languageen
dc.rightshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
dc.subjectCiencias Astronómicas
dc.subjectPhysics
dc.subjectExponential function
dc.subjectGeneralization
dc.subjectOrbital decay
dc.subjectChaotic
dc.subjectDynamical friction
dc.subjectChandrasekhar limit
dc.subjectClassical mechanics
dc.subjectGalaxy
dc.subjectBlack hole
dc.titleEffect of Chaotic Orbits on Dynamical Friction
dc.typeArticulo
dc.typeComunicacion


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