Multifaceted Accretion: The Interplay of Turbulence, Resistivity, Thermal Transport, and Dust around Black Holes
Asish Jyoti Boruah, Liza Devi, Biplob Sarkar

TL;DR
This paper explores how turbulence, resistivity, thermal transport, and dust influence black hole accretion flows, emphasizing their combined effects on flow stability, energy transfer, and emission characteristics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the interplay between multiple physical processes in black hole accretion disks, highlighting areas for future research.
Findings
Turbulence enhances mixing and angular momentum transfer.
Resistivity affects energy dissipation and heat transfer efficiency.
Dust impacts emission and flow dynamics near black holes.
Abstract
Accretion near black holes (BHs) is multidimensional, with turbulence, resistivity, thermal transport, and dust dynamics all playing essential roles. In cold accretion discs (ADs) or the region of an AD where magnetic fields (MFs) are negligible (or absent), hydrodynamic (HD) turbulence is probably dominating. However, Magneto-rotational instability (MRI) is the primary cause of turbulence in ADs. Significant velocity variations and rapid pressure changes are characteristics of turbulent flows, which allow better mixing and more angular momentum (AM) and energy transfer. Also, in accretion flow (AF), the interaction between turbulence and resistivity determines the efficiency of energy dissipation and heat transfer. Radiation, convection, and thermal conduction (TC) are the heat transport modes existing in AFs, where TC enables energy transfer in accreting materials via heat flux.…
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