Source to Accretion Disk Tilt
M.M. Montgomery, E. L. Martin

TL;DR
This paper proposes that lift, caused by differing gas stream speeds over an accretion disk, can induce and sustain disk tilt, explaining retrograde precession in various astrophysical systems.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mechanism where lift from gas stream dynamics causes accretion disk tilt, independent of magnetic or radiative effects.
Findings
Lift depends on mass and surface area of the disk.
A minimum mass transfer rate is required to initiate tilt.
The mechanism explains observed precession in CVs and protostellar systems.
Abstract
Many different system types retrogradely precess, and retrograde precession could be from a tidal torque by the secondary on a misaligned accretion disk. However, a source to cause and maintain disk tilt is unknown. In this work, we show that accretion disks can tilt due to a force called lift. Lift results from differing gas stream supersonic speeds over and under an accretion disk. Because lift acts at the disk's center of pressure, a torque is applied around a rotation axis passing through the disk's center of mass. The disk responds to lift by pitching around the disk's line of nodes. If the gas stream flow ebbs, then lift also ebbs and the disk attempts to return to its original orientation. To first approximation, lift does not depend on magnetic fields or radiation sources but does depend on mass and the surface area of the disk. Also, for disk tilt to be initiated, a minimum…
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