Simulations of radiative turbulent mixing layers
Suoqing Ji, S. Peng Oh, Phillip Masterson

TL;DR
This study uses 3D MHD simulations with NEI and photoionization to explore radiative turbulent mixing layers, revealing their properties, stability, and potential to explain high ion observations in the CGM.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the dynamics, ionization states, and magnetic effects in turbulent mixing layers, challenging simple analytic models and emphasizing the role of cooling and magnetic fields.
Findings
Column densities are lower in pure CIE models than observed.
Magnetic fields stabilize the layer, making flow nearly laminar.
NEI effects can increase column densities by factors of a few.
Abstract
Radiative turbulent mixing layers should be ubiquitous in multi-phase gas with shear flow. They are a potentially attractive explanation for the high ions such as OVI seen in high velocity clouds and the circumgalactic medium (CGM) of galaxies. We perform 3D MHD simulations with non-equilibrium (NEI) and photoionization modeling, with an eye towards testing simple analytic models. Even purely hydrodynamic collisional ionization equilibrium (CIE) calculations have column densities much lower than observations. Characteristic inflow and turbulent velocities are much less than the shear velocity, and the layer width rather than . Column densities are not independent of density or metallicity as analytic scalings predict, and show surprisingly weak dependence on shear velocity and density contrast. Radiative cooling, rather than…
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