Instability of Supersonic Cold Streams Feeding Galaxies I: Linear Kelvin-Helmholtz Instability with Body Modes
Nir Mandelker, Dan Padnos, Avishai Dekel, Yuval Birnboim, Andreas, Burkert, Mark R. Krumholz, Elad Steinberg

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the linear Kelvin-Helmholtz instability of cold streams feeding galaxies, revealing a transition from surface to body modes in the supersonic regime, with implications for galaxy formation.
Contribution
It provides an analytical solution for the linear KHI in cold streams, identifying the transition to body modes and estimating growth times relevant to galaxy feeding processes.
Findings
Transition from surface to body modes in supersonic regime
KHI growth times range from 0.01 to 10 virial crossing times
Analytic predictions confirmed by hydrodynamical simulations
Abstract
Massive galaxies at high redshift are predicted to be fed from the cosmic web by narrow, dense, cold streams. These streams penetrate supersonically through the hot medium encompassed by a stable shock near the virial radius of the dark-matter halo. Our long-term goal is to explore the heating and dissipation rate of the streams and their fragmentation and possible breakup, in order to understand how galaxies are fed, and how this affects their star-formation rate and morphology. We present here the first step, where we analyze the linear Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (KHI) of a cold, dense slab or cylinder flowing through a hot, dilute medium in the transonic regime. The current analysis is limited to the adiabatic case with no gravity and assuming equal pressure in the stream and the medium. By analytically solving the linear dispersion relation, we find a transition from a dominance…
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