scholarly journals A Numerical Study of Relativistic Jets

1996 ◽  
Vol 175 ◽  
pp. 435-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.A. Font ◽  
J.M. Marti ◽  
J.M. Ibáñez ◽  
E. Müller

Numerical simulations of supersonic jets are able to explain the structures observed in many VLA images of radio sources. The improvements achieved in classical simulations (see Hardee, these proceedings) are in contrast with the almost complete lack of relativistic simulations the reason being that numerical difficulties arise from the highly relativistic flows typical of extragalactic jets. For our study, we have developed a two-dimensional code which is based on (i) an explicit conservative differencing of the special relativistic hydrodynamics (SRH) equations and (ii) the use of an approximate Riemann solver (see Martí et al. 1995a,b and references therein).

2018 ◽  
Vol 27 (10) ◽  
pp. 1844011 ◽  
Author(s):  
José M. Martí ◽  
Manel Perucho ◽  
José L. Gómez ◽  
Antonio Fuentes

Recollimation shocks (RS) appear associated with relativistic flows propagating through pressure mismatched atmospheres. Astrophysical scenarios invoking the presence of such shocks include jets from AGNs and X-ray binaries and GRBs. We shall start reviewing the theoretical background behind the structure of RS in overpressured jets. Next, basing on numerical simulations, we will focus on the properties of RS in relativistic steady jets threaded by helical magnetic fields depending on the dominant type of energy. Synthetic radio maps from the simulation of the synchrotron emission for a selection of models in the context of parsec-scale extragalactic jets will also be discussed.


1996 ◽  
Vol 175 ◽  
pp. 467-468
Author(s):  
Steve Higgins ◽  
TIM O'BRIEN ◽  
James Dunlop

We have simulated the passage of an extragalactic jet through a medium containing an ensemble of cool, dense clouds. The hydrodynamic code uses the second-order Godunov method of Falle (Falle 1991, van Leer 1979) in three-dimensional, cartesian coordinates. We have estimated the synchrotron emissivity and used this to produce synthetic radio maps. The results are reminiscent of structures seen in many extragalactic radio sources.


1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 463-465 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. W. Jones

Multifrequency and multitime polarimetry of active, compact radio sources strongly suggest that the magnetic-field structures in these sources are largely disordered or turbulent. Some initial, detailed model calculations of relativistic jets with turbulent fields have been performed in an effort to better understand the relationships between the observed polarization properties and physical structures of sources. Simulations are described involving nearly steady, isothermal, constant velocity jets with magnetic fields having approximately a Kolmogorov turbulence spectrum that is carried along the jet. They produce structures similar to those actually observed, including a core-jet appearance with superluminal knots. Likewise, the polarization has a behavior in frequency and time that is at least qualitatively similar to that observed. In addition, although individual portions of the model sources are highly polarized, as also seen with very long baseline interferometry, the integrated polarizations are relatively small, as observed.


2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (S275) ◽  
pp. 126-130
Author(s):  
Manel Perucho ◽  
Vicent Quilis ◽  
José María Martí

AbstractWe present long-term numerical simulations of powerful extragalactic relativistic jets in two dimensions. The jets are injected in a realistic atmosphere with powers 1044, 1045 and 1046 erg/s, during tens of Myrs. After this time, the jet injection is switched off. We follow the evolution of the jets and associated shocks from 1 kpc to hundreds of kiloparsecs during more than 100 Myrs. The 1045 erg/s jet was simulated with leptonic and baryonic composition. Our results show that, for powerful jets, the main heating mechanisms are the driving shock-wave and mixing. We discuss the implications that these results have in the frame of cooling flows in clusters.


2011 ◽  
Vol 378-379 ◽  
pp. 11-14
Author(s):  
Hong Chen ◽  
Wei Bing Zhu ◽  
Run Peng Sun ◽  
Bin Zhang

Shock diffraction over geometric obstacles is performed on two-dimensional cartesian grid using the TVD WAF method in conjunction with the HLLC approximate Riemann solver and dimensional splitting. Present cartesian grid results for popular and challenging two-dimensional shock diffraction problems are presented and compared to experimental photographs. Benchmark and example test cases were chosen to cover a wide variety of Mach numbers for weak and strong shock waves, and for square and circular geometries. The results show that the comparisons between experimental and simulated images are consistent.


1994 ◽  
Vol 273 ◽  
pp. 1-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Bartello ◽  
Olivier Métais ◽  
Marcel Lesieur

Numerical simulations investigating the formation and stability of quasi-two-dimensional coherent vortices in rotating homogeneous three-dimensional flow are described. In a numerical study of shear flows Lesieur, Yanase & Métais (1991) found that cyclones (respectively anticyclones) with |ω2D| ∼ O(2Ω), where ω2D is the vorticity and Ω is the rotation rate, are stabilized (respectively destabilized) by the rotation. A study of triply periodic pseudo-spectral simulations (643) was undertaken in order to investigate the vorticity asymmetry in homogeneous turbulence. Specifically, we examine (i) the possible three-dimensionalization of initially two-dimensional vortices and (ii) the emergence of quasi-two-dimensional structures in initially-isotropic three-dimensional turbulence. Direct numerical simulations of the Navier—Stokes equations are compared with large-eddy simulations employing a subgridscale model based on the second-order velocity structure function evaluated at the grid separation and with simulations employing hyperviscosity.Isolated coherent two-dimensional vortices, obtained from a two-dimensional decay simulation, were superposed with a low-amplitude three-dimensional perturbation, and used to initialize the first set of simulations. With Ω = 0, a three-dimensionalization of all vortices was observed. This occurred first in the small scales in conjunction with the formation of longitudinal hairpin vortices with vorticity perpendicular to that of the initial quasi-two-dimensional flow. In agreement with centrifugal stability arguments, when 2Ω = [ω2D]rms a rapid destabilization of anticyclones was observed to occur, whereas the initial two-dimensional cyclonic vortices persisted throughout the simulation. At larger Ω, both cyclones and anticyclones remained two-dimensional, consistent with the Taylor—Proudman theorem. A second set of simulations starting from isotropic three-dimensional fields was initialized by allowing a random velocity field to evolve (Ω = 0) until maximum energy dissipation. When the simulations were continued with 2Ω = [ω · Ω]rms/Ω, the three-dimensional flow was observed to organize into two-dimensional cyclonic vortices. At larger Ω, two-dimensional anticyclones also emerged from the initially-isotropic flow. The consequences for a variety of industrial and geophysical applications are clear. For quasi-two-dimensional eddies whose characteristic circulation times are of the order ofder of Ω−1, rotation induces a complete disruption of anticyclonic vortices, while stabilizing cyclonic ones.


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