2,041 research outputs found
Shapes of star-gas waves in spiral galaxies
Density-wave profile shapes are influenced by several effects. By solving viscous fluid equations, the nonlinear effects of the gas and its gravitational interaction with the stars can be analyzed. The stars are treated through a linear theory developed by Lin and coworkers. Short wavelength gravitational forces are important in determining the gas density profile shape. With the inclusion of disk finite thickness effects, the gas gravitational field remains important, but is significantly reduced at short wavelengths. Softening of the gas equation of state results in an enhanced response and a smoothing of the gas density profile. A Newtonian stress relation is marginally acceptable for HI gas clouds, but not acceptable for giant molecular clouds
The effect of planetary migration on the corotation resonance
The migration of a planet through a gaseous disc causes the locations of
their resonant interactions to drift and can alter the torques exerted between
the planet and the disc. We analyse the time-dependent dynamics of a
non-coorbital corotation resonance under these circumstances. The ratio of the
resonant torque in a steady state to the value given by Goldreich & Tremaine
(1979) depends essentially on two dimensionless quantities: a dimensionless
turbulent diffusion time-scale and a dimensionless radial drift speed. When the
drift speed is comparable to the libration speed and the viscosity is small,
the torque can become much larger than the unsaturated value in the absence of
migration, but is still proportional to the large-scale vortensity gradient in
the disc. Fluid that is trapped in the resonance and drifts with it acquires a
vortensity anomaly relative to its surroundings. If the anomaly is limited by
viscous diffusion in a steady state, the resulting torque is inversely
proportional to the viscosity, although a long time may be required to achieve
this state. A further, viscosity-independent, contribution to the torque comes
from fluid that streams through the resonant region. In other cases, torque
oscillations occur before the steady value is achieved. We discuss the
significance of these results for the evolution of eccentricity in
protoplanetary systems. We also describe the possible application of these
findings to the coorbital region and the concept of runaway (or type III)
migration. [Abridged]Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, to be published in MNRA
Accretion Outbursts in Circumplanetary Disks
We describe a model for the long term evolution of a circumplanetary disk
that is fed mass from a circumstellar disk and contains regions of low
turbulence (dead zones). We show that such disks can be subject to accretion
driven outbursts, analogous to outbursts previously modeled in the context of
circumstellar disks to explain FU Ori phenomena. Circumplanetary disks around a
proto-Jupiter can undergo outbursts for infall accretion rates onto the disks
in the range ~10^{-9} to 10^{-7} M_sun/yr, typical of accretion rates in the T
Tauri phase. During outbursts, the accretion rate and disk luminosity increases
by several orders of magnitude. Most of the planet mass growth during planetary
gas accretion may occur via disk outbursts involving gas that is considerably
hotter than predicted by steady state models. For low infall accretion rates
less than ~10^{-10} M_sun/yr that occur in late stages of disk accretion, disk
outbursts are unlikely to occur, even if dead zones are present. Such
conditions are favorable for the formation of icy satellites.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Tidally distorted accretion discs in binary stars
The non-axisymmetric features observed in the discs of dwarf novae in
outburst are usually considered to be spiral shocks, which are the non-linear
relatives of tidally excited waves. This interpretation suffers from a number
of problems. For example, the natural site of wave excitation lies outside the
Roche lobe, the disc must be especially hot, and most treatments of wave
propagation do not take into account the vertical structure of the disc.
In this paper I construct a detailed semi-analytical model of the non-linear
tidal distortion of a thin, three-dimensional accretion disc by a binary
companion on a circular orbit. The analysis presented here allows for vertical
motion and radiative energy transport, and introduces a simple model for the
turbulent magnetic stress. The m=2 inner vertical resonance has an important
influence on the amplitude and phase of the tidal distortion. I show that the
observed patterns find a natural explanation if the emission is associated with
the tidally thickened sectors of the outer disc, which may be irradiated from
the centre. According to this hypothesis, it may be possible to constrain the
physical parameters of the disc through future observations.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, to be published in MNRA
Circumbinary Disk Inner Radius as a Diagnostic for Disk–Binary Misalignment
We investigate the misalignment of the circumbinary disk around the binary HD 98800 BaBb with eccentricity e sime 0.8. Kennedy et al. observed the disk to be either at an inclination of 48° or polar aligned to the binary orbital plane. Their simulations showed that alignment from 48° to a polar configuration can take place on a shorter timescale than the age of this system. We perform hydrodynamical numerical simulations in order to estimate the cavity size carved by the eccentric binary for different disk inclinations as an independent check of polar alignment. Resonance theory suggests that torques on the inner parts of a polar disk around such a highly eccentric binary are much weaker than in the coplanar case, indicating a significantly smaller central cavity than in the coplanar case. We show that the inferred inner radius (from carbon monoxide measurements) of the accretion disk around BaBb can exclude the possibility of it being mildly inclined with respect to the binary orbital plane and therefore confirm the polar configuration. This study constitutes an important diagnostic for misaligned circumbinary disks, since it potentially allows us to infer the disk inclination from observed gas disk inner radii
Instability of an accretion disk with a magnetically driven wind
We present a linear analysis of the stability of accretion disks in which
angular momentum is removed by the magnetic torque exerted by a centrifugally
driven wind. The effects of the dependence of the wind torque on field strength
and inclination, the sub-Keplerian rotation due to magnetic forces, and the
compression of the disk by the field are included. A WKB dispersion relation is
derived for the stability problem. We find that the disk is always unstable if
the wind torque is strong. At lower wind torques instability also occurs
provided the rotation is close to Keplerian. The growth time scale of the
instability can be as short as the orbital time scale. The instability is
mainly the result of the sensitivity of the mass flux to changes in the
inclination of the field at the disk surface. Magnetic diffusion in the disk
stabilizes if the wind torque is small.Comment: Submitted to A&
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