Inside-Out Evacuation of Transitional Protoplanetary Disks by the Magneto-Rotational Instability
Eugene I. Chiang, Ruth A. Murray-Clay

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the magneto-rotational instability (MRI), activated by stellar X-ray ionization, can explain accretion in transitional protoplanetary disks, leading to an inside-out disk dissipation process.
Contribution
It shows how MRI driven by X-ray ionization explains accretion in transitional disks and provides insights into disk dissipation and planet-disk interactions.
Findings
MRI explains observed accretion rates in transitional disks.
Accretion occurs inside-out, driven by X-ray ionization at the disk rim.
Disk inside properties are decoupled from outer regions.
Abstract
How do T Tauri disks accrete? The magneto-rotational instability (MRI) supplies one means, but protoplanetary disk gas is typically too poorly ionized to be magnetically active. Here we show that the MRI can, in fact, explain observed accretion rates for the sub-class of T Tauri disks known as transitional systems. Transitional disks are swept clean of dust inside rim radii of ~10 AU. Stellar coronal X-rays ionize material in the disk rim, activating the MRI there. Gas flows from the rim to the star, at a rate limited by the depth to which X-rays ionize the rim wall. The wider the rim, the larger the surface area that the rim wall exposes to X-rays, and the greater the accretion rate. Interior to the rim, the MRI continues to transport gas; the MRI is sustained even at the disk midplane by super-keV X-rays that Compton scatter down from the disk surface. Accretion is therefore steady…
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