Self-gravitating anisotropic fluid. II: Newtonian theory
Tom Cadogan, Eric Poisson

TL;DR
This paper develops a Newtonian theory for self-gravitating anisotropic fluids inspired by liquid crystals, applying it to static stellar models with phase transitions, and sets the foundation for a relativistic extension.
Contribution
It introduces a novel Newtonian framework for anisotropic fluids incorporating a director vector and phase transition mechanics, paving the way for relativistic generalization.
Findings
Formulation of a Lagrangian including all relevant energy contributions.
Derivation of equations of motion and Poisson's equation from the action.
Development of interface mechanics for phase transitions in stellar models.
Abstract
This paper is the second in a sequence of three devoted to the formulation of a theory of self-gravitating anisotropic fluids in both Newtonian gravity and general relativity. In this second paper we develop the Newtonian theory, inspired by a real-life example of an anisotropic fluid, the (nematic) liquid crystal. We apply the theory to the construction of static and spherical stellar models. In addition to the usual fluid variables (mass density, velocity field), the Newtonian theory features a director vector field, whose length provides a local measure of the size of the anisotropy, and whose direction gives the local direction of anisotropy. The theory is defined in terms of a Lagrangian which implicates all the relevant forms of energy: kinetic energy (with contributions from the velocity field and the time derivative of the director vector), internal energy (with isotropic and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComputational Physics and Python Applications · Elasticity and Wave Propagation · Rheology and Fluid Dynamics Studies
