STABILITY OF SHOCK-BOUNDED SLABS

Brian S. Marks & John M. Blondin

Finally, a preprint is available in our Preprint Library.
(Submitted to New Astronomy , August 1, 1996)


Recent hydrodynamic simulations have suggested that a slab of cold, dense gas, bounded on both sides by isothermal shocks, is dynamically unstable. Ethan Vishniac (ApJ 428, 186) has named this the "Nonlinear Thin Shell Instability" (NTSI), because the instability requires a nonlinear perturbation to the planar slab. We have studied such shock-bounded slabs using the numerical hydrodynamics code VH-1. Sinusoidal perturbations were added to planar slabs to determine the characteristics of the dynamical evolution as a function of the wavelength and amplitude of the perturbation relative to the width of the slab. We confirm Vishniac's claim that perturbations with amplitudes larger than the width of the slab are dynamically unstable: the NTSI. Given a suitable initial perturbation and a sufficiently large Mach number, the perturbation will grow unbounded. However, in many cases our results show that the breathing mode of the perturbed slab can "outrun" the shredding motion of the NTSI, causing the perturbations to pinch off and form a relatively flat, albeit thick, slab that remains confined in space. We have also investigated perturbations due to dense clouds advected into an unperturbed planar slab. These perturbations often lead to the NTSI effects as well.

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