Bibcode
DOI
Gomez-Pelaez, A. J.; Moreno-Insertis, F.
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 569, Issue 2, pp. 766-779.
Fecha de publicación:
4
2002
Revista
Número de citas
17
Número de citas referidas
14
Descripción
A systematic study of the linear thermal stability of a medium subject
to cooling, self-gravity, and thermal conduction is carried out for the
case when the unperturbed state is subject to global cooling and
expansion. A general, recursive WKB solution for the perturbation
problem is obtained that can be applied to a large variety of situations
in which there is a separation of timescales for different physical
processes. Solutions are explicitly given and discussed for the case in
which sound propagation and/or self-gravity are the fastest processes,
with cooling, expansion, and thermal conduction operating on slower
timescales. A brief discussion is also added for the solutions in the
cases in which cooling or conduction operate on the fastest timescale.
The general WKB solution obtained in this paper permits solving the
problem of the effect of thermal conduction and self-gravity on the
thermal stability of a globally cooling and expanding medium. As a
result of the analysis, the critical wavelength (often called the
``Field length'') above which cooling makes the perturbations unstable
against the action of thermal conduction is generalized to the case of
an unperturbed background with net cooling. As an astrophysical
application, the ``generalized Field length'' is calculated for a hot
(104-108 K), optically thin medium (as pertains,
for instance, for the hot interstellar medium of supernova remnants or
superbubbles) using a realistic cooling function and including a weak
magnetic field. The stability domains are compared with the predictions
made on the basis of models for which the background is in thermal
equilibrium. The instability domain of the sound waves in particular is
seen to be much larger in the case with net global cooling.