On the Anisotropic Nature of MRI-Driven Turbulence in Astrophysical Disks
Gareth C. Murphy, Martin E. Pessah (Niels Bohr Institute)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the anisotropic properties of MRI-driven turbulence in astrophysical disks, revealing high variability and the importance of considering anisotropy for accurate turbulence modeling.
Contribution
It introduces novel methods to quantify and analyze the time-dependent anisotropy of MRI-driven turbulence using tensor invariants and spectral stacking techniques.
Findings
MRI-driven turbulence exhibits persistent high anisotropy with sporadic isotropic transitions.
Standard spectral averaging methods are inadequate for capturing the flow's anisotropic nature.
Spectral power varies significantly along different directions, emphasizing anisotropy's role.
Abstract
The magnetorotational instability is thought to play an important role in enabling accretion in sufficiently ionized astrophysical disks. The rate at which MRI-driven turbulence transports angular momentum is related to both the strength of the amplitudes of the fluctuations on various scales and the degree of anisotropy of the underlying turbulence. This has motivated several studies of the distribution of turbulent power in spectral space. In this paper, we investigate the anisotropic nature of MRI-driven turbulence using a pseudo-spectral code and introduce novel ways to robustly characterize the underlying turbulence. We show that the general flow properties vary in a quasi-periodic way on timescales comparable to 10 inverse angular frequencies motivating the temporal analysis of its anisotropy. We introduce a 3D tensor invariant analysis to quantify and classify the evolution of…
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