Rossby Wave Instability and Long-Term Evolution of Dead Zones in Protoplanetary Discs
Ryan Miranda, Dong Lai, and Heloise Meheut

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic simulations to explore how Rossby wave instability influences dead zones in protoplanetary discs, revealing its role in angular momentum transport and disc morphology evolution.
Contribution
It demonstrates that nonlinear RWI can sustain accretion in dead zones and produce diverse disc structures, highlighting the importance of DZ size and viscosity.
Findings
Reynolds stresses reach 0.01-0.05 in dead zones due to RWI.
Narrow dead zones produce single or antipodal vortices.
RWI-driven stresses likely prevent gravitational instability in dead zones.
Abstract
The physical mechanism of angular momentum transport in poorly ionized regions of protoplanetary discs, the dead zones (DZs), is not understood. The presence of a DZ naturally leads to conditions susceptible to the Rossby wave instability (RWI), which produces vortices and spiral density waves that may revive the DZ and be responsible for observed large-scale disc structures. We present a series of two-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations to investigate the role of the RWI in DZs, including its impact on the long-term evolution of the disc and its morphology. The nonlinear RWI can generate Reynolds stresses (effective parameter) as large as in the DZ, helping to sustain quasi-steady accretion throughout the disc. It also produces novel disc morphologies, including azimuthal asymmetries with , and atypical vortex shapes. The angular momentum transport…
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