159 research outputs found
Suppression of Cross-Field Transport of a Passive Scalar in Two-Dimensional Magnetohydrodynamic Turbulence
The theory of passive scalar transport in two dimensional turbulent fluids is
generalized to the case of 2D MHD. Invariance of the cross correlation of
scalar concentration and magnetic potential produces a novel contribution to
the concentration flux. This pinch effect is proportional to the mean potential
gradient, and is shown to drastically reduce transport of the passive scalar
across the mean magnetic field when . Transport parallel to the mean magnetic
field is unchanged. Implications for models of transport in turbulent
magnetofluids are discussed.
PAC NOS. 47.25.Jn, 47.65.+aComment: uuencoded compressed postscript fil
Small-scale-field Dynamo
Generation of magnetic field energy, without mean field generation, is
studied. Isotropic mirror-symmetric turbulence of a conducting fluid amplifies
the energy of small-scale magnetic perturbations if the magnetic Reynolds
number is high, and the dimensionality of space d satisfies 2.103 < d <8.765.
The result does not depend on the model of turbulence, incompressibility and
isotropy being the only requirements.Comment: 11 pages Plain TeX, no figures, Accepted by Phys. Rev. Let
Turbulence and Particle Heating in Advection-Dominated Accretion Flows
We extend and reconcile recent work on turbulence and particle heating in
advection-dominated accretion flows. For approximately equipartition magnetic
fields, the turbulence primarily heats the electrons. For weaker magnetic
fields, the protons are primarily heated. The division between electron and
proton heating occurs between and (where
is the ratio of the gas to the magnetic pressure), depending on unknown
details of how Alfv\'en waves are converted into whistlers on scales of the
proton Larmor radius. We also discuss the possibility that magnetic
reconnection could be a significant source of electron heating.Comment: 17 pages (Latex), incl. 2 Figures; submitted to Ap
Radiative Efficiency of Collisionless Accretion
Radiative efficiency of a slowly accreting black hole is estimated using a
two-temperature model of accretion. The radiative efficiency depends on the
magnetic field strength near the Schwarzschild radius. For weak magnetic fields
(magnetic energy=equipartition/1000), the low efficiency 0.0001 assumed in some
theoretical models might be achieved. For stronger fields, a significant
fraction of viscous heat is dissipated by electrons and radiated away resulting
in a larger efficiency. At equipartition magnetic fields, we estimate
efficiency = of order 10%.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, Submitted to Ap
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