Energy ejection in the collapse of a cold spherical self-gravitating cloud
M. Joyce, B. Marcos, F. Sylos Labini

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to analyze how energy and mass are ejected during the violent collapse of a cold, self-gravitating spherical cloud, revealing scaling laws and the role of boundary effects and fluctuations.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the dependence of energy ejection on particle number and initial conditions, highlighting the interplay of perturbations and finite size effects.
Findings
Energy ejected scales as N^{1/3}.
Fraction of mass ejected grows logarithmically with N.
Boundary effects initiate mass and energy ejection.
Abstract
When an open system of classical point particles interacting by Newtonian gravity collapses and relaxes violently, an arbitrary amount of energy may in principle be carried away by particles which escape to infinity. We investigate here, using numerical simulations, how this released energy and other related quantities (notably the binding energy and size of the virialized structure) depends on the initial conditions, for the one parameter family of starting configurations given by randomly distributing N cold particles in a spherical volume. Previous studies have established that the minimal size reached by the system scales approximately as N^{-1/3}, a behaviour which follows trivially when the growth of perturbations (which regularize the singularity of the cold collapse in the infinite N limit) are assumed to be unaffected by the boundaries. Our study shows that the energy ejected…
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