Magnetorotational instability in protoplanetary discs: The effect of dust grains
Raquel Salmeron (1, 2), Mark Wardle (3) ((1) Planetary Science, Institute, Research School of Astronomy & Astrophysics, Research School of, Earth Sciences, The Australian National University, (2) Department of, Astronomy & Astrophysics, The University of Chicago

TL;DR
This study examines how dust grains affect the magnetorotational instability in protoplanetary discs, revealing that small grains significantly reduce MRI growth rates and alter magnetic coupling, especially at different radii.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the impact of dust grain size and magnetic diffusivity on MRI in protoplanetary discs, highlighting the dominant role of Hall diffusion.
Findings
Small dust grains suppress MRI growth rates.
Magnetic coupling varies with grain size and radius.
Hall diffusion influences MRI properties in inner disc regions.
Abstract
We investigate the linear growth and vertical structure of the MRI in protoplanetary discs when dust grains are well mixed with the gas over the entire disc thickness. All the grains have the same radius (a = 0.1, 1 or 3 micron) and constitute 1 % of the total mass of the gas. Solutions are obtained at R = 5 and 10 AU for a minimum-mass solar nebula model and different choices of the initially vertical magnetic field strength (B), configuration of the diffusivity tensor and grain sizes. We find that when no grains are present, or they are > 1 micron, the midplane remains magnetically coupled for B up to a few gauss at both radii. In contrast, when a population of small grains (a = 0.1 micron) is present, the disc is magnetically inactive for z/H < 2 and only B < 50 mG couple to the fluid. At 5 AU, Ohmic diffusion dominates for z/H < 1 when B < a few mG, irrespective of the properties of…
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