LANE-EMDEN EQUATION

In astrophysics, the 'Lane-Emden equation' is Poisson's equation for the gravitational potential of a self-gravitating, spherically symmetric polytropic fluid. It is named after the astrophysicists Jonathan Homer Lane and Robert Emden. Its solution provides the run of pressure and density with radius r:
: rac{1}{zeta^2} rac{d}{dzeta} left({zeta^2 rac{d heta}{dzeta}}
ight) + heta^n = 0
where
: zeta = r left( rac{4 pi G
ho_c^2}{(n+1)P_c}
ight)^{ rac{1}{2}}
and
:
ho =
ho_c heta^n ,
where the subscripts "c" refer to the values of pressure and density at the center of the sphere.
Here n is the polytropic index in which the pressure and density of the gas are related
by the polytropic equation
: P = K
ho^{1 + 1/n},
Note that solutions to the Lane-Emden equation for a given polytropic index n are known as polytropes of index n . Physically, hydrostatic equilibrium connects the gradient of the potential, the density, and the gradient of the pressure, whereas Poisson's equation connects the potential with the density. It should be clear then if we know nothing about the gas other than the way pressure and density vary with respect to one another, we can reach a solution, in principle. The particular choice of a polytropic gas as given above makes the mathematical statement of the problem particularly succinct, resulting in the Lane-Emden equation. This is a useful "zeroth order" solution for self-gravitating gaseous spheres such as stars. It is still a useful approximation in certain situations, but typically it is a rather limiting assumption.

Contents
Solutions of equation
References
External links

Solutions of equation


It is known that the equation can be solved analytically when ''n'' = 0, 1 or 5:
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! ''n'' =
| 0
| 1
| 5
|-
! ρ =
|
ho_c
|
ho_c rac{sinzeta}{zeta}
|
ho_c left(1+ rac{zeta^2}{3}
ight)^{- rac{5}{2}}
|-
! ζ =
| sqrt 6
| pi
| ∞
|}
It is indeed constant density for ''n'' = 0, and the equation reduces to a Spherical Bessel differential equation which gives a sinc function when ''n'' = 1.

References



★ .

External links





★ Horedt, George Paul ( 1986 ) , ''Astrophysics and Space Science'' vol. 126, no. 2, Oct. 1986, p. 357-408. ( ISSN 0004-640X ). Collected at the Smithsonian/NASA Astrophysical Data System.

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