This density image shows the fully saturated convective instability
in the self-similar driven wave. Red marks the highest density gas, the
shocked stellar ejecta. The yellow underneath the band of red is the
unshocked (supersonic) ejecta, and the light blue is the shocked CSM.
This density image shows the blastwave after it has encountered the reverse
wind shock, and just before it hits the HST ring. A blastwave that
started out in a circumstellar wind has a higher density in the shocked ejecta,
and longer, narrower fingers from the convective instability, than a blastwave
that propagated entirely in a uniform density environment.
The following sequence shows the density of the gas at four successive times during
the encounter of the blastwave with the dense ring of gas surrounding the supernova.
The presence of the Rayleigh-Taylor fingers in the unstable blastwave can alter the
dynamics of the impact such that the pressure at the surface of the ring rises faster
than without the fingers, perhaps shifting the turn-on of the X-ray emission to earlier
times.
The role of the Rayleigh-Taylor fingers in modifying the pressure at the surface of
the ring is best seen in this MPEG animation of the gas pressure.
Notice in this frame the high pressure behind a reflected shock reflecting off
the head of a RT finger.
(MPEG is 500 kbytes)