Excitation of spiral density waves by convection in accretion discs
G. R. Mamatsashvili, W. K. M. Rice

TL;DR
This paper investigates how convection in accretion discs excites spiral density waves through shear-induced mode coupling, revealing a new mechanism for angular momentum transport in such astrophysical systems.
Contribution
It demonstrates that shear causes convective modes to generate spiral density waves, a novel coupling mechanism in accretion disc dynamics, with implications for angular momentum transport.
Findings
Convective modes generate spiral density waves via shear coupling.
Maximum wave generation occurs when azimuthal and vertical scales match the disc height.
Spiral density waves transport angular momentum outward, unlike convective modes.
Abstract
Motivated by the recent results of \citet{Lesur_Ogilvie10} on the transport properties of incompressible convection in protoplanetary discs, in this paper we study the role of compressibility and hence of another basic mode -- spiral density waves -- in convective instability in discs. We analyse the linear dynamics of non-axisymmetric convection and spiral density waves in a Keplerian disc with superadiabatic vertical stratification using the local shearing box approach. It is demonstrated that the shear associated with Keplerian differential rotation introduces a novel phenomenon, it causes these two perturbation modes to become coupled: during evolution the convective mode generates (trailing) spiral density waves and can therefore be regarded as a new source of spiral density waves in discs. The wave generation process studied here owes its existence solely to shear of the disc's…
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