Temporal evolution of magnetic molecular shocks I. Moving grid simulations
P. Lesaffre, J.-P. Chi\`eze, S. Cabrit, G. Pineau des For\^ets

TL;DR
This paper presents advanced time-dependent simulations of magnetic shocks in molecular clouds, revealing new insights into shock speeds, instabilities, and the effects of magnetic fields, with validation against previous models and novel findings on shock behavior.
Contribution
It introduces the first time-dependent models of dissociative shocks with magnetic precursors and stationary CJ shocks in molecular conditions, expanding understanding of shock dynamics.
Findings
Maximum steady C-shock speed is lower than previously thought.
Identified large amplitude bouncing instability near H2 dissociation limit.
Observed oscillatory behavior at higher shock speeds due to ionization processes.
Abstract
We present time-dependent 1D simulations of multifluid magnetic shocks with chemistry resolved down to the mean free path. They are obtained with an adaptive moving grid implemented with an implicit scheme. We examine a broad range of parameters relevant to conditions in dense molecular clouds, with preshock densities between 10^3 and 10^5 cm-3, velocities between 10 and 40 km/s, and three different scalings for the transverse magnetic field: B=0,0.1,1 \mu G \sqrt{n.cm3}. We first use this study to validate the results of Chi\`eze, Pineau des For\^ets & Flower (1998), in particular the long delays necessary to obtain steady C-type shocks, and we provide evolutionary time-scales for a much greater range of parameters. We also present the first time-dependent models of dissociative shocks with a magnetic precursor, including the first models of stationary CJ shocks in molecular…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Astro and Planetary Science
