Radio Jet Propagation and Wide-Angle Tailed Radio Sources in Merging Galaxy Cluster Environments
Abstract
The intracluster medium (ICM) within merging clusters of galaxies is likely to be in a violent or turbulent dynamical state which may have a significant effect on the evolution of cluster radio sources. We present results from a recent gas + N-body simulation of a cluster merger, suggesting that mergers can result in longlived, supersonic bulk flows, as well as shocks, within a few hundred kiloparsecs of the core Of the dominant cluster. These results have motivated our new two-dimensional and three-dimensional simulations of jet propagation in such environments. The first set of simulations models the ISM/ICM transition as a contact discontinuity with a strong velocity shear. A supersonic (M_j_ = 6) jet crossing this discontinuity into an ICM with a transverse, supersonic wind bends continuously, becomes "naked" on the upwind side, and forms a distended cocoon on the downwind side. In the case of a mildly supersonic jet (M_j_ = 3), however, a shock is driven into the ISM and ISM material is pulled along with the jet into the ICM. Instabilities excited at the ISM/ICM interface result in the jet repeatedly pinching off and reestablishing itself in a series of "disconnection events." The second set of simulations deals with a jet encountering a shock in the merging cluster environment. A series of relatively high-resolution two-dimensional calculations is used to confirm earlier analysis predicting that the jet will not disrupt when the jet Mach number is greater than the shock Mach number. A jet which survives the encounter with the shock will decrease in radius and disrupt shortly thereafter as a result of the growth of Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities. We also find, in disagreement with predictions, that the jet flaring angle decreases with increasing jet density. Finally, a three-dimensional simulation of a jet crossing an oblique shock gives rise to a morphology which resembles a wide-angle tailed radio source with the jet flaring at the shock and disrupting to form a long, turbulent tail which is dragged downstream by the postshock wind.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- May 1995
- DOI:
- 10.1086/175674
- Bibcode:
- 1995ApJ...445...80L
- Keywords:
-
- Galactic Clusters;
- Galactic Winds;
- Interacting Galaxies;
- Intergalactic Media;
- Radio Jets (Astronomy);
- Radio Sources (Astronomy);
- Shock Waves;
- Supersonic Flow;
- Astronomical Models;
- Computerized Simulation;
- Density Distribution;
- Hydrodynamics;
- Shock Wave Interaction;
- Shock Wave Propagation;
- Velocity Distribution;
- Astrophysics;
- GALAXIES: JETS;
- GALAXIES: INTERGALACTIC MEDIUM;
- HYDRODYNAMICS;
- GALAXIES: INTERACTIONS;
- GALAXIES: ISM;
- METHODS: NUMERICAL;
- SHOCK WAVES