Surprises in astrophysical gasdynamics
Steven A. Balbus, WIlliam J. Potter

TL;DR
This review explores counterintuitive phenomena in astrophysical gas dynamics across various contexts, highlighting surprising results and fundamental ideas to deepen understanding of magnetised fluid behavior in space.
Contribution
It provides an unconventional selection of problems and results that challenge intuition, offering new insights and techniques in astrophysical fluid dynamics.
Findings
Instabilities in accretion discs
Hydrodynamics of the Sun's convective zone
Magnetic shielding in galaxy clusters
Abstract
Much of astrophysics consists of the study of ionised gas under the influence of gravitational and magnetic fields. Thus, it is not possible to understand the astrophysical universe without a detailed knowledge of the dynamics of magnetised fluids. Fluid dynamics is, however, a notoriously tricky subject, in which it is all too easy for one's a priori intuition to go astray. In this review, we seek to guide the reader through a series of illuminating yet deceptive problems, all with an enlightening twist. We cover a broad range of topics including the instabilities acting in accretion discs, the hydrodynamics governing the convective zone of the Sun, the magnetic shielding of a cooling galaxy cluster, and the behaviour of thermal instabilities and evaporating clouds. The aim of this review is to surprise and intrigue even veteran astrophysical theorists with an idiosynchratic choice of…
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