pervect said:
Actually, it might be somewhat helpful if you could paste an expression for your cubic for the relativistic hoop, that I could cut and paste it into maple to examine. The webpage shows the equation as an image, so I'd have to type it in, and it's a bit long.
I'm pretty sure from the results that there isn't any exponentially growing instability - could there be any linear growing instability? For instance, could we have a double root at c=-1, and would this cause some linear growing solution like \delta \, t \, cos(...) to become a solution of the differential equations? (I can't quite confirm from the numerical results I have that there is a double root at c=-1, but it's at least close to being a double in some of the regions I was evaluating numerically).
(edit: Removed unwieldy cubic in TeX; see next post for friendlier version.)
For m=1, this does have an exact factor of (c+1), so there is a double root of -1.
BTW, I said before that I hadn't found the singular behaviour except at points far from equilibrium, but I hadn't really looked at the algebra closely enough. If you take either the denominator of the angular acceleration, or the derivative of the angular momentum with respect to omega, set v_r to 0, substitute the versions of r and omega parameterised by n, and factor the polynomial in n ... you get a quartic, one of whose roots is real, positive, and in the physically valid range. For k=1/2, rho=1, r_0=1, this value of n yields:
omega = 0.56583358
r = 1.19312053
s = 1/n = 1.617309826
This s value is after the point where the radius has its maximum, but before the point where the energy has its maximum; it lies within the region where pulsations are unstable.
While this equilibrium state of the hoop is itself perfectly OK, if you perturb it by adding a tiny non-zero v_r, the hoop can't actually change radius while preserving angular momentum. I still can't see the deep reason why this is true -- whether the hyperelastic model is somehow implying a violation of causality, or whether there's something else entirely that we're missing. But it might be helpful to have this equilibrium point to study.
If you want the exact quartic for the general case, it's:
<br />
Q^4 n^4 - 2 K^2 Q^2 n^3 + 6 K^4 n - 5 K^4<br />
where
<br />
K^2 = k / (2 \rho)<br />
<br />
Q^2 = 1 + K^2<br />