Relativistic MHD simulations of core-collapse GRB jets: 3D instabilities and magnetic dissipation
Omer Bromberg (1), Alexander Tchekhovskoy (2) ((1) Princeton, (2), Berkeley)

TL;DR
This study uses 3D relativistic MHD simulations to explore instabilities in core-collapse GRB jets, revealing how magnetic instabilities influence jet stability, propagation, and energy dissipation, potentially powering gamma-ray burst emissions.
Contribution
The paper presents the first self-consistent 3D relativistic MHD simulations of Poynting flux dominated jets from compact objects, analyzing their stability and dissipation mechanisms.
Findings
External kink mode reduces jet speed but does not disrupt it.
Internal kink mode causes magnetic reconnection and energy conversion.
Jet stability depends on ambient medium density profile.
Abstract
Relativistic jets naturally occur in astrophysical systems that involve accretion onto compact objects, such as core collapse of massive stars in gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and accretion onto supermassive black holes in active galactic nuclei (AGN). It is generally accepted that these jets are powered electromagnetically, by the magnetised rotation of a central compact object. However, how they produce the observed emission and survive the propagation for many orders of magnitude in distance without being disrupted by current-driven non-axisymmetric instabilities is the subject of active debate. We carry out time-dependent 3D relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations of relativistic, Poynting flux dominated jets. The jets are launched self-consistently by the rotation of a strongly magnetised central compact object. This determines the natural degree of azimuthal magnetic field winding,…
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