Magnetic field transport in compact binaries
Nicolas Scepi, Geoffroy Lesur, Guillaume Dubus, Jonatan, Jacquemin-Ide

TL;DR
This paper investigates how large-scale magnetic fields influence accretion disk dynamics in compact binaries, proposing magnetic flux transport as a key factor in explaining observed disk truncation and eruptions.
Contribution
It introduces a disk instability model that couples magnetic flux evolution with disk dynamics, highlighting magnetic flux advection as crucial for matching observations.
Findings
Magnetic flux advection improves lightcurve modeling accuracy.
Magnetic fields cause disk truncation, affecting eruption behavior.
Inner magnetized disk transitions to outer turbulent disk.
Abstract
Dwarf novae (DNe) and low mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) show eruptions that are thought to be due to a thermal-viscous instability in their accretion disk. These eruptions provide constraints on angular momentum transport mechanisms. We explore the idea that angular momentum transport could be controlled by the dynamical evolution of the large scale magnetic field. We study the impact of different prescriptions for the magnetic field evolution on the dynamics of the disk. This is a first step in confronting the theory of magnetic field transport with observations. We develop a version of the disk instability model that evolves the density, the temperature and the large scale vertical magnetic flux together. We take into account the accretion driven by turbulence or by a magnetized outflow. To evolve the magnetic flux, we use a toy model with physically motivated prescriptions depending…
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