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Waves and Solitons in Multi-component Self-gravitating Systems
Kinwah Wu Mullard Space Science Laboratory University College London Curtis Saxton (MSSL, UCL) Ignacio Ferreras (P&A, UCL)
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Outline Collective oscillations, non-linear waves and solitons (a brief overview) Multi-component self-gravitating systems Two studies: results and some thoughts - “tsunami” & “quakes” in galaxy clusters - solitons in self-gravitating sheets and 1D infinite media
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Collective phenonmona in multi-component systems
- Coupled oscillators: different oscillation normal modes and dissipation processes non-linear mode coupling resonance - Two-stream instability - Landau damping cf. electron-ion plasma wave-wave interaction particle-particle interaction wave-particle interaction
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Solitons as non-linear wave packets
Non-linear, non-dispersive waves: The nonlinearity which leads to wave steeping counteracts the wave dispersion. Interact with one another so to keep their basic identity -- particle liked Linear superposition often not applicable Propagation speed proportional to pulse height An example soliton pulse profile: pulse height propagation speed
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Situations that give rise to solitons
- fluids with surface tension - ion acoustic oscillations in plasmas - etc Kadomstev-Petviasgvili (KP) Equation Korteweg-de Vries (KdV) Equation mathematical methods developed to solve various soliton equations e.g. Baecklund transformation, inverse scattering method, Zakharov-Shabat method ……
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Mutiple solitons development of “soliton trains” (Zabusky & Kruskal 1965) kdV equation with a cosine-like function as initial condition component solitions with larger pulse height travel faster a train of solitions lined up with the tallest leading the way => “big” solitions are more likely to find each other depending on dimension - resonance and phase shift before collision resonant states: momentum exchange phase shift time after collision
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Multi-component self-gravitating systems
The fluid description (non-rotational case) Conservation equations: Poisson equation:
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Quakes and Tsunami in Galaxy Clusters
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Galaxy clusters as “spherical” 2-component coupled oscillators
DM - momentum carrier Gas - coolant (dissipater) inflow gas cooling Solve to obtain the stationary structure
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Perturbative analysis
Lagrange perturbation for the DM and gas components: the perturbed Poisson equation plus 6 coupled perturbed hydrodynamic equations Diagonise the matrix Define the boundary conditions Numerically integrate the DEs algebraic functions of hydrodynamic variables
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Normal mode oscillations (the DM component)
mass inflow rate = 100 M_sun per year (size ~ 1 Mpc; kT_max ~ 10 keV) eigen-mode - oscillation modes depend on BCs - high order modes not damped - different stability properties for even and odd modes in some cases similar eigen-planes can be generated for the gas component
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Quakes and tsunami in galaxy clusters: dark-matter oscillations and gas dissipation
- close proximity between clusters --> excitation of DM oscillations, ie. cluster quakes high-order modes are also fast growing --> oscillations may occur in a wide range of scales oscillations in DM coupled with oscillations in gas cooler interior of gas (due to radiative loss) --> slower sound speeds in the inner cluster region (“cooling flow” core) --> waves piled up when propagating inward, ie. cluster tsunami mode cascade --> inducing turbulence and hence heating of the cluster throughout cf. “original” cluster tsunami model of Fujita, Suzaki & Wada (2004) and Fujita, Matsumoto & Wada (2005) stationary DM provide background potential (ie. no quake), waves in gas piled up when propagating inward (“self-excited” tsunami only)
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Solitons in self-gravitating sheets and 1D infinite media
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Planar systems: two component infinite self-gravitating sheets
Suppose: 1. inertia of one component is unimportant 2. the component is approximately isothermal 3. polytropic EOS “quasi-1D” approximation
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Perturbative expansion
constant yet to be determined Use two new variables:
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Formation of solitons KdV equation --> soliton solution
effective sound speed rescaling variables KdV equation --> soliton solution cf. Solitons in single-component self-gravitating systems (Semekin et al. 2001)
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Some thoughts and questions:
2 colliding DM solitons resonant state Suppose the resonant half life Q1: Are ridge solitons manifested as filaments in cosmic sheets? Q2: Can soliton collisions make globular clusters?
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Summary Collective and non-linear oscillations, which may not be
present in single component self-gravitating systems, could be important in multi-component systems. DM and gas play different roles in exciting and sustaining oscillations in astrophysical systems. Galaxy clusters can be considered as couple oscillators with DM as the mode resonant medium and gas as the energy dissipater. Gas in clusters can be compression heated by acoustic coupling with the DM oscillations. Solitons can be excited in DM/gas sheets and infinite self-gravitating systems, and they could lead to “bright” structure formation, provided that certain dynamical conditions are satisfied.
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