Spherical Accretion with Anisotropic Thermal Conduction
Prateek Sharma, Eliot Quataert, James M. Stone

TL;DR
This study investigates how anisotropic thermal conduction influences magnetized spherical accretion flows, revealing the growth of the magnetothermal instability, magnetic field amplification, and their effects on accretion rates and plasma heating.
Contribution
It demonstrates the role of the magnetothermal instability in shaping magnetic fields and heat transport in spherical accretion, with implications for accretion rates and observed phenomena.
Findings
MTI causes magnetic field to become predominantly radial
Conductive heat flux exceeds convective flux and approaches Spitzer value
Accretion rate is significantly reduced when magnetic energy reaches virial temperature
Abstract
We study the effects of anisotropic thermal conduction on magnetized spherical accretion flows using global axisymmetric MHD simulations. In low collisionality plasmas, the Bondi spherical accretion solution is unstable to the magnetothermal instability (MTI). The MTI grows rapidly at large radii where the inflow is subsonic. For a weak initial field, the MTI saturates by creating a primarily radial magnetic field, i.e., by aligning the field lines with the background temperature gradient. The saturation is quasilinear in the sense that the magnetic field is amplified by a factor of independent of the initial field strength (for weak fields). In the saturated state, the conductive heat flux is much larger than the convective heat flux, and is comparable to the field-free (Spitzer) value (since the field lines are largely radial). The MTI by itself does not appreciably…
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