Magnetorotational instability in decretion disks of critically rotating stars and the outer structure of Be and Be/X-ray disks
Jiri Krticka, Petr Kurfurst, Iva Krtickova

TL;DR
This paper investigates the magnetorotational instability in decretion disks of critically rotating stars, proposing it as a source of anomalous viscosity that influences the disk's radial extent and mass-loss rate, with implications for Be star observations.
Contribution
It provides an analytic study of the magnetorotational instability in outflowing disks, linking instability development to disk viscosity and outer radius in critically rotating stars.
Findings
MRI develops near the star if plasma parameter is large enough.
MRI disappears at radii where orbital velocity equals sound speed.
The sonic radius can serve as an effective outer disk boundary.
Abstract
Evolutionary models of fast-rotating stars show that the stellar rotational velocity may approach the critical speed. Critically rotating stars cannot spin up more, therefore they lose their excess angular momentum through an equatorial outflowing disk. The radial extension of such disks is unknown, partly because we lack information about the radial variations of the viscosity. We study the magnetorotational instability, which is considered to be the origin of anomalous viscosity in outflowing disks. We used analytic calculations to study the stability of outflowing disks submerged in the magnetic field. The magnetorotational instability develops close to the star if the plasma parameter is large enough. At large radii the instability disappears in the region where the disk orbital velocity is roughly equal to the sound speed. The magnetorotational instability is a plausible source of…
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