Nonlinear Evolution of Instabilities Between Dust and Sound Waves
Eric R. Moseley, Jonathan Squire, Philip F. Hopkins

TL;DR
This paper investigates the non-linear development of the Resonant Drag Instability in dust-gas mixtures through numerical simulations, revealing complex turbulence and dust concentration patterns with implications for astrophysical phenomena.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed numerical analysis of the non-linear evolution of the acoustic RDI, highlighting distinct regimes and anisotropic saturated states.
Findings
Instability growth matches linear theory predictions.
Dust forms filaments, jets, and plumes aligned with acceleration.
Turbulence and density fluctuations vary across regimes.
Abstract
We study the non-linear evolution of the acoustic 'Resonant Drag Instability' (RDI) using numerical simulations. The acoustic RDI is excited in a dust-gas mixture when dust grains stream through gas, interacting with sound waves to cause a linear instability. We study this process in a periodic box by accelerating neutral dust with an external driving force. The instability grows as predicted by linear theory, eventually breaking into turbulence and saturating. As in linear theory, the non-linear behavior is characterized by three regimes - high, intermediate, and low wavenumbers - the boundary between which is determined by the dust-gas coupling strength and the dust-to-gas mass ratio. The high and intermediate wavenumber regimes behave similarly to one another, with large dust-to-gas ratio fluctuations while the gas remains largely incompressible. The saturated state is highly…
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