Laboratory Investigation of Astrophysical Collimated Jets with Intense Lasers

  • Dawei Yuan
  • , Yutong Li
  • , Tao Tao
  • , Huigang Wei
  • , Jiayong Zhong
  • , Baojun Zhu
  • , Yanfei Li
  • , Jiarui Zhao
  • , Fang Li
  • , Bo Han
  • , Zhe Zhang
  • , Guiyun Liang
  • , Feilu Wang
  • , Guangyue Hu
  • , Jian Zheng
  • , Shaoen Jiang
  • , Kai Du
  • , Yongkun Ding
  • , Shenlei Zhou
  • , Baoqiang Zhu
  • Jianqiang Zhu, Gang Zhao, Jie Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

One of the remarkable dynamic features of the Herbig-Haro (HH) object is its highly collimated propagation far away from the accretion disk. Different factors are proposed to give us a clearly physical explanation behind these fascinating phenomena, including magnetic field, radiation cooling, surrounding medium, and so on. Laboratory astrophysics, as a new complementary method of studying astrophysical issues, can provide an insight into these behaviors in a similar and controllable laboratory environment. Here we report the scaled laboratory experiments that a well-collimated radiative jet with high Mach number is successfully created to mimic the evolution of HH objects. According to our results, we find that the radiation cooling effect within the jet and the outer rare surrounding plasmas from the X-ray (>keV) photoionized target contribute to the jet collimation. The local nonuniform density structures along the collimated radiative jet axis are caused by the pressure competition between the inner jet and the outer plasmas. The corresponding simulations performed with radiation-hydrodynamic codes FLASH reveal how the radiative jet evolves.

Original languageEnglish
Article number146
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume860
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 20 Jun 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Haro objects
  • Herbig
  • ISM: jets and outflows
  • instabilities
  • radiation: dynamics

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