Thermal instability in radiation hydrodynamics: instability mechanisms, position-dependent S-curves, and attenuation curves
Daniel Proga, Tim Waters, Sergei Dyda, and Zhaohuan Zhu

TL;DR
This paper explores thermal instability mechanisms in radiation hydrodynamics, focusing on position-dependent equilibrium curves and attenuation effects, to better understand multiphase gas formation in astrophysical environments beyond the optically thin limit.
Contribution
It introduces a framework for analyzing thermal instability in full radiation hydrodynamics with attenuation, extending the theory beyond the optically thin approximation.
Findings
Position-dependent equilibrium curves are crucial for stability analysis.
Attenuation can induce thermal instability in irradiated gas slabs.
Negative slope on attenuation curves indicates potential instability.
Abstract
Local thermal instability can plausibly explain the formation of multiphase gas in many different astrophysical environments, but the theory is only well understood in the optically thin limit of the equations of radiation hydrodynamics (RHD). Here we lay groundwork for transitioning from this limit to a full RHD treatment assuming a gray opacity formalism. We consider a situation where the gas becomes thermally unstable due to the hardening of the radiation field when the main radiative processes are free-free cooling and Compton heating. We identify two ways in which this can happen: (i) when the Compton temperature increases with time, through a rise in either the intensity or energy of a hard X-ray component; and (ii) when attenuation reduces the flux of the thermal component so that the Compton temperature increases with depth through the slab. Both ways likely occur in the broad…
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