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We argue that self-excited instabilities are the cause of spiral patterns in simulations of unperturbed stellar discs. In previous papers, we have found that spiral patterns were caused by a few concurrent waves, which we claimed were modes. The superposition of a few steadily rotating waves inevitably causes the appearance of the disc to change continuously, and creates the kind of shearing spiral patterns that have been widely reported. Although we have found that individual modes last for relatively few rotations, spiral activity persists because fresh instabilities appear, which we suspected were excited by the changes to the disc caused by previous disturbances. Here we confirm our suspicion by demonstrating that scattering at either of the Lindblad resonances seeds a new groove-type instability. With this logical gap closed, our understanding of the behaviour in the simulations is almost complete. We believe that our robust mechanism is a major cause of spiral patterns in the old stellar discs of galaxies, including the Milky Way where we have previously reported evidence for resonance scattering in the recently released Gaia data.
We present a study of the spiral responses in a stable disc galaxy model to co-orbiting perturbing masses that are evenly spaced around rings. The amplitudes of the responses, or wakes, are proportional to the masses of the perturbations, and we find
In order to address the question of whether spiral disturbances in galaxy discs are gravitationally coupled to the halo, we conduct simulations of idealized models of disc galaxies. We compare growth rates of spiral instabilities in identical mass mo
We found that loosely wound spiral shocks in an isothermal gas disk caused by a non-axisymmetric potential are hydrodynamically unstable, if the shocks are strong enough. High resolution, global hydrodynamical simulations using three different numeri
We consider the problem of self-regulated heating and cooling in galaxy clusters and the implications for cluster magnetic fields and turbulence. Viscous heating of a weakly collisional magnetised plasma is regulated by the pressure anisotropy with r
The advent of new time domain surveys and the imminent increase in astronomical data expose the shortcomings in traditional time series analysis (such as power spectra analysis) in characterising the abundantly varied, complex and stochastic light cu