1 / 17

Clumps With Self Contained Magnetic Field And Their Interaction With Shocks

Clumps With Self Contained Magnetic Field And Their Interaction With Shocks. Shule Li, Adam Frank, Eric Blackman University of Rochester, Department of Physics and Astronomy. Rochester, New York 14627 HEDLA 2012, Tallahassee, FL.

renata
Télécharger la présentation

Clumps With Self Contained Magnetic Field And Their Interaction With Shocks

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Clumps With Self Contained Magnetic Field And Their Interaction With Shocks Shule Li, Adam Frank, Eric Blackman University of Rochester, Department of Physics and Astronomy. Rochester, New York 14627 HEDLA 2012, Tallahassee, FL

  2. Problem Description wind ambient clump Introduction • Problem of clumps and their interaction with shocks is crucial in understanding interstellar medium, supernova remnants etc. Magnetic field often plays an important role in such an interaction. • Most previous numerical studies focus on clumps immersed in a uniform background magnetic field. However, realistic clumps usually contain tangled magnetic field inside them. • Our study focus on clump's shocked behavior when there is a tangled magnetic field contained. The field's spatial distribution can be either ordered or random.

  3. Field aligned with shock • Magnetic field is amplified at the top of and behind the clump. • The top of the shocked clump is streamlined but there is no significant suppression on the fragmentation of the clump even for low initial β cases. Field perpendicular with shock • Magnetic field is wrapping around the clump and gets greatly amplified due to stretching. • The shocked clump is highly streamlined and the fragmentation can be greatly suppressed even for high initial β cases. Jones, T.W., Ryu, Dongsu, Tregillis, I.L. 1996 ApJ, 473, 365 Previous Works • Adding radiative cooling into the simulation can further change the shocked behavior: more thin fragments, confined boundary flows, etc. (Fragile et al, 2005 ApJ 619, 327)

  4. Lab Efforts • NLUF, Pat Hartigan et al.

  5. AstroBEAR is a parallelized hydrodynamic/MHD simulation code suitable for a variety of astrophysical problems. AstroBEAR is designed for 2D and 3D adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) simulations, the current versioncode shows good scaling above thousands of processors. In addition, AstroBEAR comes with a number of multiphysical processes such as self gravity, thermal conduction and resistivity.

  6. Density Contrast Wind Mach Alfvenic Mach Magnetic Beta Crushing Time Toroidal. Aligned Poloidal. Perp. Poloidal. Aligned Simulation Setup The simulation is set up so that the wind crossing time is shorter than the Alfvenic crossing time, the latter is shorter than the sound crossing time. We investigate the case when the contained field is ordered, as well as the case when the contained field is random. Radiative cooling is included in the simulation.

  7. Movie: Toroidal Perpendicular

  8. Movie: Toroidal Aligned

  9. Movie: Poloidal Perpendicular

  10. Movie: Poloidal Aligned

  11. Movie: Random Field with Kolmogorov Type Spectrum

  12. When the toroidal field is aligned with the shock, the clump material are compressed into a “nose cone”shape bounded by strong toroidal field. This phenomenon is similar to the “nose cone”shapes seen in MHD jet simulations. • If we add a weak poloidal field to the above toroidal field, we see a much thicker “nose cone” with a ring shaped head. It is because even a weak added poloidal field can break the axisymmetry. Discussion I: Clump Morphology

  13. The direction of field pinch will affect the clump's morphological evolution. Discussion I: Clump Morphology

  14. The initial field geometry affects the mixing ratio. The poloidal aligned case has the most magnetic energy in field component aligned with the shock direction; the two perpendicular cases only have a part of their magnetic energy in the field component aligned with the shock direction; the toroidal aligned case has no such component at all. Discussion II: Mixing Ratio

  15. Mixing ratio and kinetic energy transfer are correlated. More aligned field components result in higher mixing ratio, more efficient clump fragmentation, higher kinetic transfer rate and more turbulent downstream flow. Discussion II: Kinetic Energy Transfer

  16. Summary • Shocked clumps with "internal" fields show rich behavior not seen in external only field simulations. • Post-shock evolution depends strongly on internal field morphology • We see sharp distinction between Toroidal/Poloidal evolution depending on alignment with shock propagation • The kinetic energy transfer and the mixing ratio depend on contained field geometry. • Simulations may provide morphological links to astrophysical clumpy environments.

  17. Thank You !

More Related