Feathering Instability of Spiral Arms. I: Formulation of the Problem


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In this paper we study the feathering substructures along spiral arms by considering the perturbational gas response to a spiral shock. Feathers are density fluctuations that jut out from the spiral arm to the inter-arm region at pitch angles given by the quantum numbers of the doubly-periodic structure. In a localized asymptotic approximation, related to the shearing sheet except that the inhomogeneities occur in space rather than in time, we derive the linearized perturbation equations for a razor-thin disk with turbulent interstellar gas, frozen-in magnetic field, and gaseous self-gravity. Apart from the modal quantum numbers, the individual normal modes of the system depend on seven dimensionless quantities that characterize the underlying time-independent axisymmetric state plus its steady, nonlinear, two-armed spiral-shock (TASS) response to a hypothesized background density-wave supported by the disk stars of the galaxy. We show that some of these normal modes have positive growth rates. Their over-density contours in the post-shock region are very reminiscent of observed feathering substructures in full magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations. The feathering substructures are parasitic instabilities intrinsic to the system; thus, their study not only provides potential diagnostics for important parameters that characterize the interstellar medium of external galaxies, but also yields a deeper understanding of the basic mechanism that drives the formation of the giant molecular clouds (GMCs) and the OB stars that outline observed grand-design spirals.

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