Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T20:32:31.301Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Theory and Simulation of Asymmetrically Perturbed Radiatively Cooled Jets

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

P. E. Hardee
Affiliation:
Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487, U.S.A.
J. M. Stone
Affiliation:
Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, U.S.A.
J. Xu
Affiliation:
Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, U.S.A.

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Results of a spatial stability analysis and of numerical simulations of a “slab” jet in which optically thin radiative cooling is dynamically important are presented. Two different cooling curves are used. Unstable Kelvin-Helmholtz modes are significantly different from the adiabatic limit, and the form of the cooling function strongly affects the results. The numerical simulations are in excellent agreement with the linear stability analysis. In the non-linear regime growth of the surface wave at low frequencies results in sinusoidal oscillation which can disrupt the jet, while non-linear body waves produce low amplitude wiggles within the jet that can result in shocks within the jet. In cooling jets, these shocks can produce dense knots and filaments of cooling gas within the jet, and weak shock “spurs” in the ambient gas. Acceleration of ambient gas can be produced by these “spurs”, or by rapid entrainment if the jet is disrupted. For parameters typical of protostellar jets perturbations with a period of < 100 yrs should excite body waves which produce internal shocks and small amplitude wiggles. The lack of large amplitude wiggles in most observed systems is consistent with the suggestion that jets arise from the inner regions (r < 1 AU) of accretion disks.

Type
Part 12. Outflows from YSO and AGN
Copyright
Copyright © Astronomical Society of the Pacific 1997

References

Dalgarno, A., & McCray, R.A. 1972, ARA&A, 10, 375 (DM)Google Scholar
Hardee, P.E., & Norman, M.L. 1988, ApJ, 334, 70 Google Scholar
Hardee, P.E., & Stone, J.M. 1996, ApJ, submittedGoogle Scholar
Heathcote, S., Morse, J., Hartigan, P., Reipurth, B., Schwartz, R.D., Bally, J., & Stone, J.M. 1996, AJ, in pressGoogle Scholar
MacDonald, J., & Bailey, M.E. 1981, MNRAS, 197, 995 (MB)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reipurth, B. et al., 1996, in preparationGoogle Scholar
Stone, J.M., Xu, J., & Hardee, P.E. 1996, ApJ, submittedGoogle Scholar