English

When Shock Waves Collide

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics 2016-06-08 v1

Abstract

Supersonic outflows from objects as varied as stellar jets, massive stars and novae often exhibit multiple shock waves that overlap one another. When the intersection angle between two shock waves exceeds a critical value, the system reconfigures its geometry to create a normal shock known as a Mach stem where the shocks meet. Mach stems are important for interpreting emission-line images of shocked gas because a normal shock produces higher postshock temperatures and therefore a higher-excitation spectrum than an oblique one does. In this paper we summarize the results of a series of numerical simulations and laboratory experiments designed to quantify how Mach stems behave in supersonic plasmas that are the norm in astrophysical flows. The experiments test analytical predictions for critical angles where Mach stems should form, and quantify how Mach stems grow and decay as intersection angles between the incident shock and a surface change. While small Mach stems are destroyed by surface irregularities and subcritical angles, larger ones persist in these situations, and can regrow if the intersection angle changes to become more favorable. The experimental and numerical results show that although Mach stems occur only over a limited range of intersection angles and size scales, within these ranges they are relatively robust, and hence are a viable explanation for variable bright knots observed in HST images at the intersections of some bow shocks in stellar jets.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1603.08985,
  title  = {When Shock Waves Collide},
  author = {P. Hartigan and J. Foster and A. Frank and E. Hansen and K. Yirak and A. S. Liao and P. Graham and B. Wilde and B. Blue and D. Martinez and P. Rosen and D. Farley and R. Paguio},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1603.08985},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

2016, accepted by the Astrophysical Journal