Dust in the Wind: New Instabilities Across Astrophysical Systems
Phil Hopkins
Caltech
Dust is ubiquitous in astrophysics, and plays a fundamental role in the plasma physics of the interstellar medium, planet formation, chemistry, cooling, absorption/extinction, acceleration of winds via radiation pressure, and more. Recently, a new and enormous family of instabilities has been identified that are generic to any dust-gas mixture (and other multi-fluid systems). These 'resonant drag instabilities' could dramatically alter our inferences about all of the above, by generating very large-amplitude (orders-of-magnitude) fluctuations in the dust-to-gas ratio on micro-scales in these settings. I'll present describe these
instabilities and how they manifest, and present results of novel hybrid
MHD-PIC simulations of their behavior in a wide range of environments,
including proto-planetary disks, stellar winds and atmospheres, molecular
clouds and HII regions, and the vicinity of AGN. I'll discuss one
example where dust may strongly interact with another key component of
space plasmas 'cosmic rays' and could potentially resolve some severe
discrepancies between standard theoretical models for cosmic ray dynamics
and observations of both Solar system cosmic rays and Galactic gamma-rays.
Date: | Mardi, 9 novembre 2021 |
Time: | 15:30 |
Where: | McGill University |
| McGill - Zoom |