Magnetorotational turbulence transports angular momentum in stratified disks with low magnetic Prandtl number but magnetic Reynolds number above a critical value
Jeffrey S. Oishi, Mordecai-Mark Mac Low

TL;DR
This study shows that in stratified accretion disks with high magnetic Reynolds number, magnetorotational turbulence efficiently transports angular momentum independently of magnetic Prandtl number, unlike previous low-Reynolds number simulations.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that stratified MRI-driven turbulence achieves Prandtl-independent angular momentum transport above a critical magnetic Reynolds number, challenging prior findings and highlighting the role of mean field dynamo action.
Findings
Transport becomes Prandtl-independent above a critical Rm
Mean field dynamo operates without helicity constraints
Simulations suggest real disks have Rm > Rm_c
Abstract
The magnetorotational instability (MRI) may dominate outward transport of angular momentum in accretion disks, allowing material to fall onto the central object. Previous work has established that the MRI can drive a mean-field dynamo, possibly leading to a self-sustaining accretion system. Recently, however, simulations of the scaling of the angular momentum transport parameter with the magnetic Prandtl number have cast doubt on the ability of the MRI to transport astrophysically relevant amounts of angular momentum in real disk systems. Here, we use simulations including explicit physical viscosity and resistivity to show that when vertical stratification is included, mean field dynamo action operates, driving the system to a configuration in which the magnetic field is not fully helical. This relaxes the constraints on the generated field provided by magnetic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows
