Entropy principle and complementary second law of thermodynamics for self-gravitating systems
Ping He, Dong-Biao Kang (ITP-CAS)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the entropy principles governing self-gravitating systems, revealing a duality where the system's global state minimizes entropy while local parts maximize it, suggesting a need to generalize thermodynamics for such systems.
Contribution
It introduces a novel entropy variational framework combined with the Jeans equation, demonstrating the importance of velocity anisotropy and proposing a complementary second law of thermodynamics for self-gravitating systems.
Findings
Velocity anisotropy influences density profiles significantly.
Theoretical predictions align well with simulation data.
A dual entropy state explains the system's equilibrium behavior.
Abstract
(abbreviated) The statistical mechanics of self-gravitating systems is a long-held puzzle. In this work, we employ a phenomenological entropy form of ideal gas, first proposed by White & Narayan, to revisit this issue. By calculating the first-order variation of the entropy, subject to the mass- and energy-conservation constraints, we obtain an entropy stationary equation. Incorporated with the Jeans equation, and by specifying some functional form for the anisotropy parameter beta, we numerically solve the two equations, and demonstrate that the velocity anisotropy parameter plays an important role to attain a density profile that is finite in mass, energy, and spatial extent. If incorporated again with some empirical density profile from simulations, our theoretical predictions of the anisotropy parameter, and the radial pseudo-phase-space density in the outer non-gravitationally…
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