On the Dynamics and Evolution of Gravitational Instability-Dominated Disks
Mark R. Krumholz, Andreas Burkert

TL;DR
This paper develops a self-consistent model for the evolution of gravitational instability-dominated disks, deriving their steady-state properties and evolution dynamics without relying on parameterized prescriptions, with implications for various astrophysical environments.
Contribution
It introduces a new framework that determines transport rates based on gravitational instability, providing analytical solutions for disk properties and evolution.
Findings
Disks reach a steady state if the accretion rate is high enough.
The steady state persists even with star formation included.
Disks out of equilibrium evolve on the viscous timescale.
Abstract
We derive the evolution equations describing a thin axisymmetric disk of gas and stars with an arbitrary rotation curve that is kept in a state of marginal gravitational instability and energy equilibrium due to the balance between energy released by accretion and energy lost due to decay of turbulence. Rather than adopt a parameterized alpha prescription, we instead use the condition of marginal gravitational instability to self-consistently determine the position- and time-dependent transport rates. We show that there is a steady-state configuration for disks dominated by gravitational instability, and that this steady state persists even when star formation is taken into account if the accretion rate is sufficiently large. For disks in this state we analytically determine the velocity dispersion, surface density, and rates of mass and angular momentum transport as a function of the…
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