We found that loosely wound spiral shocks in an isothermal gas disk caused by
a non-axisymmetric potential are hydrodynamically unstable, if the shocks are
strong enough. High resolution, global hydrodynamical simulations using three
different numerical schemes, i.e. AUSM, CIP, and SPH, show similarly that
trailing spiral shocks with the pitch angle of larger than ~10 deg wiggle, and
clumps are developed in the shock-compressed layer. The numerical simulations
also show clear wave crests that are associated with ripples of the spiral
shocks. The spiral shocks tend to be more unstable in a rigidly rotating disk
than in a flat rotation. This instability could be an origin of the secondary
structures of spiral arms, i.e. the spurs/fins, observed in spiral galaxies. In
spite of this local instability, the global spiral morphology of the gas is
maintained over many rotational periods. The Kelvin-Helmholtz (K-H) instability
in a shear layer behind the shock is a possible mechanism for the wiggle
instability. The Richardson criterion for the K-H stability is expressed as a
function of the Mach number, the pitch angle, and strength of the background
spiral potential. The criterion suggests that spiral shocks with smaller pitch
angles and smaller Mach numbers would be more stable, and this is consistent
with the numerical results.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures, to be published in MNRAS, high quality figures
can be downloaded from http://th.nao.ac.jp/~wada/paperlist.htm