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The adiabatic shock produced by a compact object moving supersonically relative to a gas with uniform entropy and no vorticity is a source of entropy gradients and vorticity. We investigate these analytically. The non-axisymmetric Rayleigh-Taylor and axisymmetric Kelvin-Helmholtz linear instabilities are potential sources of destabilization of the subsonic accretion flow after the shock. A local Lagrangian approach is used in order to evaluate the efficiency of these linear instabilities. However, the conditions required for such a WKB type approximation are fulfilled only marginally: a quantitative estimate of their local growth rate integrated along a flow line shows that their growth time is at best comparable to the time needed for advection onto the accretor, even at high Mach number and for a small accretor size. Despite this apparently low efficiency, several features of these mechanisms qualitatively match those observed in numerical simulations: in a gas with uniform entropy, the instability occurs only for supersonic accretors. It is nonaxisymmetric, and begins close to the accretor in the equatorial region perpendicular to the symmetry axis. The mechanism is more efficient for a small, highly supersonic accretor, and also if the shock is detached. We also show by a 3-D numerical simulation an example of unstable accretion of a subsonic flow with non-uniform entropy at infinity. This instability is qualitatively similar to the one observed in 3-D simulations of the Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton flow, although it involves neither a bow shock nor an accretion line.
Binary stars often move through an ambient medium from which they accrete material and angular momentum, as in triple-star systems, star-forming clouds, young globular clusters and in the centres of galaxies. A binary form of Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton ac
The Bondi-Hoyle formula gives the approximate accretion rate onto a point particle accreting from a uniform medium. However, in many situations accretion onto point particles occurs from media that are turbulent rather than uniform. In this paper, we
Hermann Bondis 1952 paper On spherically symmetrical accretion is recognized as one of the foundations of accretion theory. Although Bondi later remarked that it was not much more than an examination exercise, his mathematical analysis of spherical a
Accretion onto central massive black holes in galaxies is often modelled with the Bondi solution. In this paper we study a generalization of the classical Bondi accretion theory, considering the additional effects of the gravitational potential of th
We revisit Bondi accretion - steady-state, adiabatic, spherical gas flow onto a Schwarzschild black hole at rest in an asymptotically homogeneous medium - for stiff polytropic equations of state (EOSs) with adiabatic indices $Gamma > 5/3$. A general