MHD Simulation of a Disk Subjected to Lense-Thirring Precession
Kareem A. Sorathia, Julian H. Krolik, John F. Hawley

TL;DR
This study uses MHD and HD simulations to investigate how accretion disks around spinning objects align with the spin axis due to Lense-Thirring precession, revealing the role of turbulence and internal stresses.
Contribution
It provides the first direct comparison between MHD and non-viscous HD simulations to clarify the mechanisms driving disk alignment under Lense-Thirring precession.
Findings
MHD turbulence does not behave like isotropic viscosity.
Disk alignment occurs more efficiently with MHD effects.
Radial flows are transonic and weakly affected by internal stresses.
Abstract
When matter orbits around a central mass obliquely with respect to the mass's spin axis, the Lense-Thirring effect causes it to precess at a rate declining sharply with radius. Ever since the work of Bardeen & Petterson (1975), it has been expected that when a fluid fills an orbiting disk, the orbital angular momentum at small radii should then align with the mass's spin. Nearly all previous work has studied this alignment under the assumption that a phenomenological "viscosity" isotropically degrades fluid shears in accretion disks, even though it is now understood that internal stress in flat disks is due to anisotropic MHD turbulence. In this paper we report a pair of matched simulations, one in MHD and one in pure (non-viscous) HD in order to clarify the specific mechanisms of alignment. As in the previous work, we find that disk warps induce radial flows that mix angular momentum…
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