Abstract
We show the initial results of our three-dimensional MHD simulations of the flow of the Galactic atmo- sphere as it responds to a spiral perturbation in the potential. In our standard case, as the gas approaches the arm, there is a downward converging flow that terminates in a complex of shocks just ahead of the midplane density peak. The density maximumslants forward at high z, preceded by a similarly leaning shock. The latter diverts the flow upward and over the arm, as in a hydraulic jump. Behind the gaseous arm, the flow falls again, generating further secondary shocks as it approaches the lower z material. In cases with two arms in the perturbing potential, the gaseous arms tends to lie somewhat downstream of the potential minimum. In the four-arm case, this is true at large r or early evolution times. At smaller r, the gaseous arms follow a tighter spiral, crossing the potential maximum and fragmenting into sections arranged on average to follow the potential spiral. Structures similar to the high-z part of the gaseous arms are found in the interarm region of our two-arm case, while broken arms and low column density bridges are present in the four-arm case. Greater structure is expected when we include cooling of denser regions.We present three examples of what can be learned from these models. Wecompare the velocity fieldwith that of purely circular rotation and find that an observer inside the Galaxy should see radial velocity deviations typically greater than 20 km s1.Syn- thetic spectra, vertical from the midplane, show features at velocities20 km s1, which do not correspond to actual density concentrations. Placing the simulated observer outside the Galaxy, we find velocity structure and arm corrugation similar to those observed inH inNGC5427
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Gomez, G. C., & Cox, D. P. (2002). Three‐dimensional Magnetohydrodynamic Modeling of the Gaseous Structure of the Galaxy: Setup and Initial Results. The Astrophysical Journal, 580(1), 235–252. https://doi.org/10.1086/343129
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.