Large scale magnetic fields in viscous resistive accretion disks. I. Ejection from weakly magnetized disks
Gareth C. Murphy, Jonathan Ferreira, Claudio Zanni

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to explore how weak magnetic fields in accretion disks can still produce jets, revealing that even low magnetization at the midplane can lead to jet formation under certain conditions.
Contribution
It demonstrates through simulations that weakly magnetized disks can launch stable jets when the surface magnetization reaches unity, challenging the assumption that strong fields are necessary.
Findings
Jets are launched from a finite radial zone in weakly magnetized disks.
Jet velocity remains too low to match observed astrophysical jets.
Ejection occurs when surface magnetization reaches unity, despite low midplane magnetization.
Abstract
Cold steady-state disk wind theory from near Keplerian accretion disks requires a large scale magnetic field at near equipartition strength. However the minimum magnetization has never been tested. We investigate the time evolution of an accretion disk threaded by a weak vertical magnetic field. The strength of the field is such that the disk magnetization falls off rapidly with radius. Four 2.5D numerical simulations of viscous resistive accretion disk are performed using the magnetohydrodynamic code PLUTO. In these simulations, a mean field approach is used and turbulence is assumed to give rise to anomalous transport coefficients (alpha prescription). The large scale magnetic field introduces only a small perturbation to the disk structure, with accretion driven by the dominant viscous torque. A super fast magnetosonic jet is observed to be launched from the innermost regions and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Advanced Combustion Engine Technologies
