Poynting Flux Dominated Jets in Decreasing Density Atmospheres. I. The Non-relativistic Current-driven Kink Instability and the Formation of "Wiggled" Structures
arXiv:astro-ph/0406405 · doi:10.1086/425337
Abstract
Non-relativistic three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) simulations of Poynting flux dominated (PFD) jets are presented. Our study focuses on the propagation of strongly magnetized hypersonic, but sub-Alfvénic ($C^{2}_{\rm s} \ll V^{2}_{\rm jet} < V^{2}_{\rm A}$) flow and on the subsequent development of a current-driven (CD) kink instability. This instability may be responsible for the ``wiggled'' structures seen in sub-parsec scale (VLBI) jets. In the present paper, we investigate the nonlinear behavior of PFD jets in a variety of external ambient magnetized gas distributions, including those with density, pressure, and temperature gradients. Our numerical results show that the jets can develop CD distortions in the trans-Alfvénic flow case, even when the flow itself is still strongly magnetically dominated. An internal non-axisymmetric body mode grows on time scales of order of the Alfvén crossing time and distorts the structure and magnetic configuration of the jet. The kink ($m=1$) mode of the CD instability, driven by the radial component of the Lorentz force, grows faster than other higher order modes ($m>1$). In the jet frame the mode grows locally and expands radially at each axial position where the jet is unstable: the instability, therefore, does not propagate as a wave along the jet length. A naturally-occurring, external helically magnetized wind, which is (quasi-) axially current-free, surrounds the well-collimated current-carrying jet and reduces velocity shear between the jet and external medium. This stabilizes the growth of MHD Kelvin-Helmholtz surface modes in the inner jet flow.
70 pages, 23 figures, 3 tables, Appendix, submitted to ApJ