73 research outputs found
On the Fundamental Properties of Dynamically Hot Galaxies
A two-component isothermal equilibrium model is applied to reproduce basic
structural properties of dynamically hot stellar systems immersed in their
massive dark haloes. The origin of the fundamental plane relation for giant
ellipticals is naturally explained as a consequence of dynamical equilibrium in
the context of the model. The existence of two galactic families displaying
different behaviour in the luminosity--surface-brightness diagram is shown to
be a result of a smooth transition from dwarfs, dominated by dark matter near
the centre, to giants dominated by the luminous stellar component. The
comparison of empirical scaling relations with model predictions suggests that
probably a unique dissipative process was operating during the violent stage of
development of stellar systems in the dark haloes, and the depth of the
potential well controlled the observed luminosity of the resulting galaxies.
The interpretation also provides some restrictions on the properties of dark
haloes implied by the fundamental scaling laws.Comment: 9 pages, 7 PostScript figures, uses MNRaS LaTeX style file; accepted
for publication in MNRaS (Aug 1996
Adaptive Mesh Refinement for Supersonic Molecular Cloud Turbulence
We performed a series of three-dimensional numerical simulations of
supersonic homogeneous Euler turbulence with adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) and
effective grid resolution up to 1024^3 zones. Our experiments describe
non-magnetized driven supersonic turbulent flows with an isothermal equation of
state. Mesh refinement on shocks and shear is implemented to cover dynamically
important structures with the highest resolution subgrids and calibrated to
match the turbulence statistics obtained from the equivalent uniform grid
simulations.
We found that at a level of resolution slightly below 512^3, when a
sufficient integral/dissipation scale separation is first achieved, the
fraction of the box volume covered by the AMR subgrids first becomes smaller
than unity. At the higher AMR levels subgrids start covering smaller and
smaller fractions of the whole volume, which scale with the Reynolds number as
Re^{-1/4}. We demonstrate the consistency of this scaling with a hypothesis
that the most dynamically important structures in intermittent supersonic
turbulence are strong shocks with a fractal dimension of two. We show that
turbulence statistics derived from AMR simulations and simulations performed on
uniform grids agree surprisingly well, even though only a fraction of the
volume is covered by AMR subgrids. Based on these results, we discuss the
signature of dissipative structures in the statistical properties of supersonic
turbulence and their role in overall flow dynamics.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, revised versio
Energy transfer in compressible magnetohydrodynamic turbulence for isothermal self-gravitating fluids
Three-dimensional, compressible, magnetohydrodynamic turbulence of an
isothermal, self-gravitating fluid is analyzed using two-point statistics in
the asymptotic limit of large Reynolds numbers (both kinetic and magnetic).
Following an alternative formulation proposed by S. Banerjee and S. Galtier
(Phys. Rev. E,93, 033120, 2016) and S. Banerjee and S. Galtier (J. Phys. A,
Math. and Theor.,50, 015501, 2017), an exact relation has been derived for the
total energy transfer. This approach results in a simpler relation expressed
entirely in terms of mixed second-order structure functions. The kinetic,
thermodynamic, magnetic and gravitational contributions to the energy transfer
rate can be easily separated in the present form. By construction, the new
formalism includes such additional effects as global rotation, the Hall term in
the induction equation, etc. The analysis shows that solid-body rotation cannot
alter the energy flux rate of compressible turbulence. However, the
contribution of a uniform background magnetic field to the flux is shown to be
non-trivial unlike in the incompressible case. Finally, the compressible,
turbulent energy flux rate does not vanish completely due to simple alignments,
which leads to a zero turbulent energy flux rate in the incompressible case.Comment: 8 page
Scaling Laws and Intermittency in Highly Compressible Turbulence
We use large-scale three-dimensional simulations of supersonic Euler
turbulence to study the physics of a highly compressible cascade. Our numerical
experiments describe non-magnetized driven turbulent flows with an isothermal
equation of state and an rms Mach number of 6. We find that the inertial range
velocity scaling deviates strongly from the incompressible Kolmogorov laws. We
propose an extension of Kolmogorov's K41 phenomenology that takes into account
compressibility by mixing the velocity and density statistics and preserves the
K41 scaling of the density-weighted velocity v=rho^{1/3}u. We show that
low-order statistics of 'v' are invariant with respect to changes in the Mach
number. For instance, at Mach 6 the slope of the power spectrum of 'v' is -1.69
and the third-order structure function of 'v' scales linearly with separation.
We directly measure the mass dimension of the "fractal" density distribution in
the inertial subrange, D_m=2.4, which is similar to the observed fractal
dimension of molecular clouds and agrees well with the cascade phenomenology.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; in press, AIP Conference Proceedings: "Turbulence
and Nonlinear Processes in Astrophysical Plasmas", Waikiki Beach, Hawaii,
March 21, 200
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