In astrophysics, particularly the study of accretion disks, the epicyclic frequency is the frequency at which a radially displaced fluid parcel will oscillate. It can be referred to as a "Rayleigh discriminant". When considering an astrophysical disc with differential rotation , the epicyclic frequency is given by

, where R is the radial co-ordinate.[1]

This quantity can be used to examine the 'boundaries' of an accretion disc: when becomes negative, then small perturbations to the (assumed circular) orbit of a fluid parcel will become unstable, and the disc will develop an 'edge' at that point. For example, around a Schwarzschild black hole, the innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) occurs at three times the event horizon, at .

For a Keplerian disk, .

Derivation edit

An astrophysical disk can be modeled as a fluid with negligible mass compared to the central object (e.g. a star) and with negligible pressure. We can suppose an axial symmetry such that  . Starting from the equations of movement in cylindrical coordinates :

 

The second line implies that the specific angular momentum is conserved. We can then define an effective potential   and so :

 

We can apply a small perturbation   to the circular orbit :

 
So,
 

And thus :

 
We then note
 
In a circular orbit  . Thus :
 
The frequency of a circular orbit is   which finally yields :
 

References edit

  1. ^ p161, Astrophysical Flows, Pringle and King 2007