4.7 Article

The cosmic-ray staircase: the outcome of the cosmic-ray acoustic instability

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 513, Issue 3, Pages 4464-4493

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stac1123

Keywords

MHD; Shock Waves; Cosmic Rays

Funding

  1. NSF [PHY-1748958]
  2. XSEDE grant [TG-AST180036]
  3. National Science Foundation [NSF PHY-1748958]
  4. Simons Foundation

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Recently, it has been found that cosmic rays can drive galactic winds and small-scale processes can affect global wind properties. By studying the effects of phase-shifted cosmic ray forces and cosmic ray heating on sound waves, it has been discovered that non-linear sound wave growth can lead to a series of propagating shocks and create cosmic ray bottlenecks. The presence of bottlenecks and their interaction with gas pressure gradients can significantly impact mass outflow rates and induce thermal instability and observable shocks on scales similar to kpc.
Recently, cosmic rays (CRs) have emerged as a leading candidate for driving galactic winds. Small-scale processes can dramatically affect global wind properties. We run two-moment simulations of CR streaming to study how sound waves are driven unstable by phase-shifted CR forces and CR heating. We verify linear theory growth rates. As the sound waves grow non-linear, they steepen into a quasi-periodic series of propagating shocks; the density jumps at shocks create CR bottlenecks. The depth of a propagating bottleneck depends on both the density jump and its velocity; Delta P-c is smaller for rapidly moving bottlenecks. A series of bottlenecks creates a CR staircase structure, which can be understood from a convex hull construction. The system reaches a steady state between growth of new perturbations, and stair mergers. CRs are decoupled at plateaus, but exert intense forces and heating at stair jumps. The absence of CR heating at plateaus leads to cooling, strong gas pressure gradients and further shocks. If bottlenecks are stationary, they can drastically modify global flows; if their propagation times are comparable to dynamical times, their effects on global momentum and energy transfer are modest. The CR acoustic instability is likely relevant in thermal interfaces between cold and hot gas, as well as galactic winds. Similar to increased opacity in radiative flows, the build-up of CR pressure due to bottlenecks can significantly increase mass outflow rates, by up to an order of magnitude. It seeds unusual forms of thermal instability, and the shocks could have distinct observational signatures, on similar to kpc scales.

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