arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1801.10166 [astro-ph.GA]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Ubiquitous Instabilities of Dust Moving in Magnetized Gas

Philip F. Hopkins, Jonathan Squire

Published 2018-01-30Version 1

Squire & Hopkins (2017) showed that coupled dust-gas mixtures are generically subject to 'resonant drag instabilities' (RDIs), which drive violently-growing fluctuations in both. But the role of magnetic fields and charged dust has not yet been studied. We therefore explore the RDI in gas which obeys ideal MHD and is coupled to dust via both Lorentz forces and drag, with an external acceleration (e.g. gravity, radiation) driving dust drift through gas. We show this is always unstable, at all wavelengths and non-zero values of dust-to-gas ratio, drift velocity, dust charge, 'stopping time' or drag coefficient (for any drag law), or field strength; moreover growth rates depend only weakly (sub-linearly) on these parameters. Dust charge and magnetic fields do not suppress instabilities, but give rise to a large number of new instability 'families,' each with distinct behavior. The 'MHD-wave' (magnetosonic or Alfven) RDIs exhibit maximal growth along 'resonant' angles where the modes have a phase velocity matching the corresponding MHD wave, and growth rates increase without limit with wavenumber. The 'gyro' RDIs are driven by resonances between drift and Larmor frequencies, giving growth rates sharply peaked at specific wavelengths. Other instabilities include 'acoustic' and 'pressure-free' modes (previously studied), and a family akin to cosmic ray instabilities which appear when Lorentz forces are strong and dust streams super-Alfvenically along field lines. We discuss astrophysical applications in the warm ISM, CGM/IGM, HII regions, SNe ejecta/remnants, Solar corona, cool-star winds, GMCs, and AGN.

Comments: Submitted to MNRAS. 32 pages (7 figures). Readers interested in an overview of the instabilities and discussion of astrophysical implications can just read sections 2 and 9 (8 pages)
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1904.11494 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2019-04-23)
Simulating the Diverse Instabilities of Dust in Magnetized Gas
arXiv:1406.0346 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2014-06-02)
Low-metallicity star formation: Relative impact of metals and magnetic fields
arXiv:1606.03121 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2016-06-09)
The role of turbulence, magnetic fields and feedback for star formation