Numerical Simulations of Radiatively-Driven Dusty Winds
Mark R. Krumholz, Todd A. Thompson

TL;DR
This paper uses numerical simulations to study how radiation pressure drives dusty winds in astrophysical environments, revealing reduced momentum transfer efficiency due to instabilities and providing a formula for modeling these winds.
Contribution
It introduces a new understanding of radiation-dust coupling efficiency in high optical depth environments and offers a practical fitting formula for galaxy formation models.
Findings
Radiation Rayleigh-Taylor instability reduces momentum transfer by a factor of 10-100.
The momentum transfer rate is approximately L/c times (1 + half the optical depth at the photosphere).
Wind properties are consistent with the single-scattering limit in ULIRGs and star clusters.
Abstract
[abridged] Radiation pressure on dust grains may be an important mechanism in driving winds in a wide variety of astrophysical systems. However, the efficiency of the coupling between the radiation field and the dusty gas is poorly understood in environments characterized by high optical depths. We present a series of idealized numerical experiments, performed with the radiation-hydrodynamic code ORION, in which we study the dynamics of such winds and quantify their properties. We find that, after wind acceleration begins, radiation Rayleigh-Taylor instability forces the gas into a configuration that reduces the rate of momentum transfer from the radiation field to the gas by a factor ~ 10 - 100 compared to an estimate based on the optical depth at the base of the atmosphere; instead, the rate of momentum transfer from a driving radiation field of luminosity L to the gas is roughly L/c…
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