Abstract
Numerical simulations are an important tool in understanding the
physical processes behind relativistic jets in active galactic nuclei.
In such simulations different combinations of intrinsic jet parameters
can be used to obtain the same jet kinetic powers. We present a
numerical investigation of the effects of varying the jet power on the
dynamic and energetic characteristics of the jets for two kinetic power
regimes; in the first regime we change the jet density whilst
maintaining a fixed velocity, in the second the jet density is held
constant while the velocity is varied. We conduct 2D axisymmetric
hydrodynamic simulations of bipolar jets propagating through an
isothermal cluster atmosphere using the FLASH MHD code in pure
hydrodynamics mode. The jets are simulated with kinetic powers ranging
between 1045 and 1046 erg/s and internal Mach
numbers ranging from 5.6 to 21.5.As the jets begin to propagate into the
intracluster medium (ICM), the injected jet energy is converted into the
thermal, kinetic and gravitational potential energy components of the
jet cocoon and ICM. We explore the temporal evolution of the
partitioning of the injected jet energy into the cocoon and the ICM and
quantify the importance of entrainment process on the energy
partitioning. We investigate the fraction of injected energy transferred
to the thermal energy component of the jet-ICM system in the context of
heating the cluster environments, noting that the jets simulated display
peak thermalisation efficiencies of least 65% and a marked dependence on
the jet density. We compare the efficiencies of the energy partitioning
between the cocoon and ICM for the two kinetic power regimes and discuss
the resulting efficiency-power scaling relations of each regime.
Original language | English |
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Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2018 |