Interaction of the magnetorotational instability with hydrodynamic turbulence in accretion disks
Jared C. Workman, Philip J. Armitage

TL;DR
This study investigates how hydrodynamic turbulence interacts with the magnetorotational instability (MRI) in accretion disks, revealing that weak turbulence has negligible effects, while strong, externally driven turbulence can modify angular momentum transport.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the interaction between MRI and hydrodynamic turbulence, highlighting conditions under which turbulence influences disk evolution.
Findings
Weak hydrodynamic forcing has negligible impact on MRI.
Large scale forcing linearly increases transport without changing MRI character.
Strong, independent turbulence can enhance or suppress MRI effects.
Abstract
Accretion disks in which angular momentum transport is dominated by the magnetorotational instability (MRI) can also possess additional, purely hydrodynamic, drivers of turbulence. Even when the hydrodynamic processes, on their own, generate negligible levels of transport, they may still affect the evolution of the disk via their influence on the MRI. Here, we study the interaction between the MRI and hydrodynamic turbulence using local MRI simulations that include hydrodynamic forcing. As expected, we find that hydrodynamic forcing is generally negligible if it yields a saturated kinetic energy density that is small compared to the value generated by the MRI. For stronger hydrodynamic forcing levels, we find that hydrodynamic turbulence modifies transport, with the effect varying depending upon the spatial scale of hydrodynamic driving. Large scale forcing boosts transport by an amount…
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