3,293 research outputs found
Effect of Fractional Kinetic Helicity on Turbulent Magnetic Dynamo Spectra
Magnetic field amplification in astrophysics ultimately requires an
understanding of magnetohydrodynamic turbulence. Kinetic helicity has long been
known to be important for large scale field growth in forced MHD turbulence,
and has been recently demonstrated numerically to be asymptotically consistent
with slow mean field dynamo action in a periodic box. Here we show numerically
that the magnetic spectrum at and below the forcing scale is also strongly
influenced by kinetic helicity. We identify a critical value,
above which the magnetic spectrum develops maxima at wavenumber scale
{\it and} at the forcing scale, For the field peaks only at the
resistive scale. Kinetic helicity may thus be important not only for generating
a large scale field, but also for establishing observed peaks in magnetic
spectra at the forcing scale. The turbulent Galactic disk provides an example
where both large scale ( supernova forcing scale) fields and small scale
( forcing scale, with peak at forcing scale) fields are observed. We
discuss this, and the potential application to the protogalaxy, but also
emphasize the limitations in applying our results to these systems.Comment: version accepted to ApJL, 10 pages, 3 fig
Implications of mean field accretion disc theory for vorticity and magnetic field growth
In addition to the scalar Shakura-Sunyaev turbulent viscosity
transport term used in simple analytic accretion disc modeling, a pseudoscalar
transport term also arises. The essence of this term can be captured even in
simple models for which vertical averaging is interpreted as integration over a
half-thickness and one separately studies each hemisphere. The additional term
highlights a complementarity between mean field magnetic dynamo theory and
accretion disc theory treated as a mean field theory. Such pseudoscalar terms
have been studied, and can lead to large scale magnetic field and vorticity
growth. Here it is shown that vorticity can grow even in the simplest azimuthal
and half-height integrated disc model, for which mean quantities depend only on
radius. The simplest vorticity growth solutions seem to have scales and vortex
survival times consistent those required for facilitating planet formation.
Also it is shown that when the magnetic back-reaction is included to lowest
order, the pseudoscalar driving the magnetic field growth and that driving the
vorticity growth will behave differently with respect to shearing and
non-shearing flows: the former can reverse sign in the two cases, while the
latter will have the same sign.Comment: 17 Pages LaTex, revised versio
Star-forming accretion flows and the low luminosity nuclei of giant elliptical galaxies
The luminosities of the centers of nearby elliptical galaxies are very low
compared to models of thin disc accretion to their black holes at the Bondi
rate, typically a few hundredths to a few tenths of a solar mass per year. This
has motivated models of inefficiently-radiated accretion that invoke weak
electron-ion thermal coupling, and/or inhibited accretion rates due to
convection or outflows. Here we point out that even if such processes are
operating, a significant fraction of the accreting gas is prevented from
reaching the central black hole because it condenses into stars in a
gravitationally unstable disc. Star formation occurs inside the Bondi radius
(typically ~100pc in giant ellipticals), but still relatively far from the
black hole in terms of Schwarzschild radii. Star formation depletes and heats
the gas disc, eventually leading to a marginally stable, but much reduced,
accretion flow to the black hole. We predict the presence of cold (~100K),
dusty gas discs, containing clustered H-alpha emission and occasional type II
supernovae, both resulting from the presence of massive stars. Star formation
accounts for several features of the M87 system: a thin disc, traced by H-alpha
emission, is observed on scales of about 100pc, with features reminiscent of
spiral arms and dust lanes; the star formation rate inferred from the intensity
of H-alpha emission is consistent with the Bondi accretion rate of the system.
Star formation may therefore help suppress accretion onto the central engines
of massive ellipticals. We also discuss some implications for the fueling of
the Galactic center and quasars.Comment: 13 pages, accepted to MNRA
Identifying Deficiencies of Standard Accretion Disk Theory: Lessons from a Mean-Field Approach
Turbulent viscosity is frequently used in accretion disk theory to replace
the microphysical viscosity in order to accomodate the observational need for
in- stabilities in disks that lead to enhanced transport. However, simply
replacing the microphysical transport coefficient by a single turbulent
transport coeffi- cient hides the fact that the procedure should formally arise
as part of a closure in which the hydrodynamic or magnetohydrodynamic equations
are averaged, and correlations of turbulent fluctuations are replaced by
transport coefficients. Here we show how a mean field approach leads quite
naturally two transport coefficients, not one, that govern mass and angular
momentum transport. In particular, we highlight that the conventional approach
suffers from a seemingly inconsistent neglect of turbulent diffusion in the
surface density equation. We constrain these new transport coefficients for
specific cases of inward, outward, and zero net mass transport. In addition, we
find that one of the new transport terms can lead to oscillations in the mean
surface density which then requires a constant or small inverse Rossby number
for disks to maintain a monotonic power-law surface density.Comment: 11 page
Simulations of a Magnetic Fluctuation Driven Large Scale Dynamo and Comparison with a Two-scale Model
Models of large scale (magnetohydrodynamic) dynamos (LSD) which couple large
scale field growth to total magnetic helicity evolution best predict the
saturation of LSDs seen in simulations. For the simplest so called "{\alpha}2"
LSDs in periodic boxes, the electromotive force driving LSD growth depends on
the difference between the time-integrated kinetic and current helicity
associated with fluctuations. When the system is helically kinetically forced
(KF), the growth of the large scale helical field is accompanied by growth of
small scale magnetic (and current) helicity which ultimately quench the LSD.
Here, using both simulations and theory, we study the complementary
magnetically forced(MF) case in which the system is forced with an electric
field that supplies magnetic helicity. For this MF case, the kinetic helicity
becomes the back-reactor that saturates the LSD. Simulations of both MF and KF
cases can be approximately modeled with the same equations of magnetic helicity
evolution, but with complementary initial conditions. A key difference between
KF and MF cases is that the helical large scale field in the MF case grows with
the same sign of injected magnetic helicity, whereas the large and small scale
magnetic helicities grow with opposite sign for the KF case. The MF case can
arise even when the thermal pressure is approximately smaller than the magnetic
pressure, and requires only that helical small scale magnetic fluctuations
dominate helical velocity fluctuations in LSD driving. We suggest that LSDs in
accretion discs and Babcock models of the solar dynamo are actually MF LSDs.Comment: 12 pages, 34 figure
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