- #36
PeterDonis
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ChrisVer said:I tried thinking of some good combination for m(r,t)
For modeling an object that radiates away mass, any such function is going to have to describe several distinct regions, where the functional dependence is different: a starting region where ##m## is time-independent, but is a function of ##r## (describing the initial mass distribution of the body before it starts radiating); then a description of the radiation process, which will require ##m## to be a function of both ##r## and ##t##, describing both the reduction of mass of the body (which will involve the radius of its surface decreasing as well) and the mass carried away by the radiation (which will be, in the idealized case, a spherically symmetric expanding shell whose inner and outer radius are changing with time); and finally a description of the vacuum regions, the one left inside the inner surface of the radiation shell after all the mass is radiated away, where the geometry is flat, and the one outside the outer surface of the radiation shell, where the mass is still the original mass ##m## and the geometry is the standard Schwarzschild geometry.
I don't think there a single closed-form function that describes all of the above; the best you can do is to fit together several different functions with appropriate junction conditions at the boundaries of the different regions.
ChrisVer said:##r_s = 2 G m(r,t)## doesn't stay constant...
Of course not. How can it if ##m## is changing?