On the stability of an accretion disc containing a toroidal magnetic field: The effect of resistivity
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 287:4 (1997) 771-789
Abstract:
We extend a previous study of the global stability of a stratified differentially rotating disc containing a toroidal magnetic field to include the effect of a non-zero resistivity η. We consider the situation when the disc is stable to convection in the absence of the magnetic field. The most robust buoyancy driven unstable modes, which occur when the field is strong enough, have low azimuthal mode number m. They grow exponentially, apparently belonging to a discrete spectrum. They exist for the dimensionless ratio η/(H2Ω) smaller than ∼ 10-2, where Ω is the angular velocity and H is the disc semithickness. In contrast the magnetorotational modes develop arbitrarily small radial scale and show transient amplification as expected from a shearing sheet analysis. The most robust modes of this type are local in all directions. Because of their more global character, the buoyancy driven modes may be important for the generation of large-scale fields and outflows. © 1997 RAS.Precessing warped discs in close binary systems
Chapter in Accretion Disks — New Aspects, Springer Nature 487 (1997) 182-198
On the stability of an accretion disc containing a toroidal magnetic field
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 279:3 (1996) 767-784
Abstract:
We study the stability of an accretion disc with an embedded toroidal magnetic field to general perturbations. Disc models are considered in which the equilibrium variables depend on both the radial and vertical coordinates. We consider the full global problem in which the disc may be in the form of a narrow annulus, or occupy a significant radial extent. Perturbations with azimuthal mode number m in the range zero up to the ratio of the radius to disc scmithickness are considered. Discs containing a purely toroidal magnetic field are always found to be unstable. We find spectra of unstable modes using local techniques. In the absence of dissipation, these modes may occupy arbitrarily small scales in the radial and vertical directions. One class of modes is driven primarily by buoyancy, while the other is driven by shear independently of the equilibrium stratification. The first type of instability predominates if the field is large, while the second type predominates if the field is weak and the underlying medium is strongly stable to convection. We also investigate stability by solving the initial value problem for perturbations numerically. We find, for our disc models, that local instabilities predominate over any possible global instability. Their behaviour is in good accord with the local analysis. The associated growth rates become just less than the orbital frequency when the ratio of magnetic energy density to pressure reaches about 10 per cent. Instabilities of the kinds discussed here may provide a mechanism for limiting the growth of toroidal fields in dynamo models of accretion discs.The tidally induced warping, precession and truncation of accretion discs in binary systems: Three-dimensional simulations
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 282:2 (1996) 597-613
Abstract:
We present the results of non-linear, hydrodynamic simulations, in three dimensions, of the tidal perturbation of accretion discs in binary systems where the orbit is circular and not necessarily coplanar with the disc mid-plane. The accretion discs are assumed to be geometrically thin, and of low mass relative to the stellar mass so that they are governed by thermal pressure and viscosity, but not self-gravity. The parameters that we consider in our models are the ratio of the orbital distance to the disc radius, D/R, the binary mass ratio, Ms/Mp, the initial inclination angle between the orbit and disc planes, δ, and the Mach number in the outer parts of the unperturbed disc, ℳ. Since we consider non-self-gravitating discs, these calculations are relevant to protostellar binaries with separations below a few hundred au. For binary mass ratios of around unity and D/R in the range 3 to 4, we find that the global evolution of the discs is governed primarily by the value of ℳ. For relatively low Mach numbers (i.e. ℳ = 10 to 20) we find that the discs develop a mildly warped structure, are tidally truncated, and undergo a near rigid body precession at a rate which is in close agreement with analytical arguments. For higher Mach numbers (ℳ ≈ 30), the evolution is towards a considerably more warped structure, but the disc none the less maintains itself as a long-lived, coherent entity. A further increase in Mach number to ℳ = 50 leads to a dramatic disruption of the disc as a result of differential precession, since the sound speed is too low to allow efficient communication between constituent parts of the disc. Additionally, it is found that the inclination angle between the disc and the orbital angular momentum vectors evolves on a longer time-scale, which is probably the viscous evolution time-scale of the disc. The calculations are relevant to a number of observed astrophysical phenomena, including the precession of jets associated with young stars, the high spectral index of some T Tauri stars, and the light curves of X-ray binaries such as Hercules X-1 which suggest the presence of precessing accretion discs.Tidally induced warps in T Tauri discs - II. A parametric study of spectral energy distributions
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 279:2 (1996) 415-428