Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

27
Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities Emmanuel Jacquet (ISIMA 2010) Mentor: Mark Krumholz

description

Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities. Emmanuel Jacquet (ISIMA 2010) Mentor: Mark Krumholz (UCSC). Outline. Introduction and motivation Fundamentals and generalities The (very) optically thin limit The (very) optically thick limit Conclusion. I. Introduction and motivation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Page 1: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Emmanuel Jacquet (ISIMA 2010)

Mentor: Mark Krumholz (UCSC)

Page 2: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Outline

I. Introduction and motivation

II. Fundamentals and generalities

III. The (very) optically thin limit

IV. The (very) optically thick limit

V. Conclusion

Page 3: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

I. Introduction and motivation

Page 4: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Classical Rayleigh-Taylor instability

• Two immiscible liquids in a gravity field

• If denser fluid above unstable (fingers).

Page 5: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Motivation 1: massive star formation

• Radiation force/gravity ~ Luminosity/Mass of star.

• >1 for M>~20-30 solar masses.

• But accretion goes on… (Krumholz et al. 2009) : radiation flows around dense fingers.

Page 6: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Motivation 2: HII regions

• Neutral H swept by ionized H

• Radiative flux in the ionized region RT instabilities?

And more!

Page 7: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

II. Fundamentals and generalities

Page 8: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

The general setting

Width Δz of interfaceignored.

z=0+- - - -z=0-

Page 9: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Equations of non-relativistic RHD

gas

Radiation

Rate of 4-momentum transfer from radiation to matter

Energy

Momentum

Page 10: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Linear analysis: the program (1/2)• Dynamical equations:

• Perturbation:

• Search for eigenmodes:

• Eulerian perturbation of a quantity Q:

• If Im(ω) > 0: instability!

• Lagrangian perturbation:

Page 11: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Linear analysis: the program (2/2)

• Perturbation equations still contain z derivatives:

• Everything determined at z=0 so should dispersion relation.

• Importance of boundary conditions.

Page 12: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Boundary conditions

• Normal flux continuity at interface in its rest frame:

• From momentum flux continuity:

• Perturbations vanish at infinity.

z>0

z<0

≈ 0

Page 13: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

III. The (very) optically thin limit

Page 14: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Absorption and reradiation in an optically thin medium

• Higher opacity for UV photons dominate force

Radiative equilibrium

Hard photon attenuation

visible near infrared

Page 15: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

So we should solve:

Let us simplify…

with:

?

Page 16: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Isothermal media with a chemical discontinuity

• Discontinuity in sound speed.• Assume ρ-independent opacity and constant

F in each region

constant T and effective gravity field:

• Constant 2x2 matrix A:

eff

Page 17: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Instability criterion

• (Pure) instability condition:

• Dispersion relation:

• Growth rates:

Ex. ofunstableconfiguration

with:

1

2

Page 18: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

IV. The (very) optically thick limit

Page 19: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Optically thick limit

• Radiation Planckian at gas T (LTE)

• Radiation conduction approximation.

• Total (non-mechanical) energy equation:

• Conditions:

Page 20: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Meet A again:

with:

Page 21: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Adiabatic approximation

• Rewrite energy equation as:

• If we neglect Δs=0.

• …under some condition:

with

Page 22: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

« Reduced » set of equations

with:

Page 23: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Perturbations evanescent on a scale height

• A traceless must be eigenmode of A:

• Pressure continuity:

Page 24: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Rarefied lower medium

• Dispersion relation: in full:

• In essence:

• Really a bona fide Rayleigh-Taylor instability!

Unstable if g>0

Page 25: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Domain of validity

Not local

Not adiabatic

No temperature locking

Not optically

thick

E=x=1

Window if:

Convective instability?

Page 26: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

So what about massive star formation?• Flux may be too high for

« adiabatic RTI »

• But if acoustic waves unstable : « (RHD) photon bubbles » (Blaes & Socrates 2003)

• In dense flux-poor regions, « adiabatic RTI » takes over.

growth time a/g (i.e. 1-10 ka).

• Tentative only…

Page 27: Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities

Summary: role of radiation in Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities & Co.

Characteristic length/photon mean free path

1

OPTICALLY THICKOPTICALLY THIN adiabaticisothermal

<< 1 >> 1

Radiation modifies EOS, with radiation force lumped in pressure gradient

Radiation as effective gravity(« equivalence principle violating »)

Flux sips in rarefied regions: buoyant photon bubbles (e.g. Blaes & Socrates 2003)