Dissipative relativistic fluid flow: A simple Lorentz invariant causal model capturing entropy shocks in its zero viscosity limit
Moritz Reintjes, Adhiraj Chaddha

TL;DR
This paper introduces a Lorentz invariant dissipative model for relativistic fluid flow that accurately captures entropy shocks and respects the speed of light limit, improving the understanding of shock waves in relativistic regimes.
Contribution
It proposes a novel Lorentz invariant dissipative relativistic fluid model using the wave operator on four-velocity, ensuring causality and entropy consistency in shock wave analysis.
Findings
The model is causal and well-posed in one dimension.
Shock profiles exist if and only if shocks are Lax admissible.
Entropy production is positive when shocks obey the speed of light bound.
Abstract
Zero viscosity limits are central to the study of classical shock waves. By identifying the correct physical (Lax admissible) shocks, they are a cornerstone in the design of analytical and numerical schemes. For relativistic fluid flow, however, the underlying dissipation mechanism, based on the Euclidean Laplace operator (so-called ``artificial viscosity''), violates Lorentz invariance, the fundamental principle of Special Relativity ensuring the speed of light bound. In this paper we show that replacing the Laplacian on conserved quantities by the wave operator on the fluid four-velocity alone, (not involving the density), provides a simplest Lorentz invariant description of dissipative relativistic fluid flow. We prove the resulting equations are causal and well-posed in one spatial dimension, and we establish their dissipativity by proving decay of Fourier Laplace modes near steady…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComputational Fluid Dynamics and Aerodynamics · Gas Dynamics and Kinetic Theory · Navier-Stokes equation solutions
