Turbulence In the Outer Regions of Protoplanetary Disks. I. Weak Accretion with No Vertical Magnetic Flux
Jacob B. Simon, Xue-Ning Bai, James M. Stone, Philip J. Armitage, and, Kris Beckwith

TL;DR
This study uses local MHD simulations to explore turbulence in the outer parts of protoplanetary disks, revealing weak accretion rates likely due to the absence of vertical magnetic flux, emphasizing the importance of vertical fields for MRI activity.
Contribution
It demonstrates the impact of ambipolar diffusion on MRI-driven turbulence and accretion in stratified disk models with zero net vertical magnetic flux.
Findings
Turbulence diminishes for Am < 1 and intensifies as Am increases.
Simulated accretion rates are much lower than observed, suggesting missing vertical magnetic flux.
Ambipolar diffusion influences the MRI dynamo cycle and magnetic field structures.
Abstract
We use local numerical simulations to investigate the strength and nature of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence in the outer regions of protoplanetary disks, where ambipolar diffusion is the dominant non-ideal MHD effect. The simulations include vertical stratification and assume zero net vertical magnetic flux. We employ a super time-stepping technique to ameliorate the Courant restriction on the diffusive time step. We find that in idealized stratified simulations, with a spatially constant ambipolar Elsasser number Am, turbulence driven by the magnetorotational instability (MRI) behaves in a similar manner as in prior unstratified calculations. Turbulence dies away for Am < 1, and becomes progressively more vigorous as ambipolar diffusion is decreased. Near-ideal MHD behavior is recovered for Am > 1000. In the intermediate regime (10 < Am < 1000) ambipolar diffusion leads to…
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