High resolution numerical simulations of unstable colliding stellar winds
Astrid Lamberts, Sebastien Fromang, Guillaume Dubus

TL;DR
This paper uses high-resolution 2D and 3D simulations with RAMSES to study the complex shock structures and instabilities in colliding stellar winds, revealing significant fluctuations and identifying key instability mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces advanced adaptive mesh refinement simulations to analyze wind collision shocks at smaller eta values and higher resolutions than previous studies.
Findings
Kelvin-Helmholtz instability causes significant fluctuations.
Thin shell instabilities develop under isothermal conditions.
Non-linear thin shell instability dominates long-term behavior.
Abstract
We investigate the hydrodynamics of the interaction of two supersonic winds in binary systems. The collision of the winds creates two shocks separated by a contact discontinuity. The overall structure depends on the momentum flux ratio eta of the winds. We use the code RAMSES with adaptive mesh refinement to study the shock structure up to smaller values of eta, higher spatial resolution and greater spatial scales than have been previously achieved. 2D and 3D simulations, neglecting orbital motion, are compared to widely-used analytic results and their applicability is discussed. In the adiabatic limit, velocity shear at the contact discontinuity triggers the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability. We quantify the amplitude of the resulting fluctuations and find that they can be significant even with a modest initial shear. Using an isothermal equation of state leads to the development of thin…
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