6,211 research outputs found
The Effect of the Hall Term on the Nonlinear Evolution of the Magnetorotational Instability: II. Saturation Level and Critical Magnetic Reynolds Number
The nonlinear evolution of the magnetorotational instability (MRI) in weakly
ionized accretion disks, including the effect of the Hall term and ohmic
dissipation, is investigated using local three-dimensional MHD simulations and
various initial magnetic field geometries. When the magnetic Reynolds number,
Re_M \equiv v_A^2 / \eta \Omega (where v_A is the Alfven speed, \eta the
magnetic diffusivity, and \Omega the angular frequency), is initially larger
than a critical value Re_{M, crit}, the MRI evolves into MHD turbulence in
which angular momentum is transported efficiently by the Maxwell stress. If
Re_M < Re_{M, crit}, however, ohmic dissipation suppresses the MRI, and the
stress is reduced by several orders of magnitude. The critical value is in the
range of 1 - 30 depending on the initial field configuration. The Hall effect
does not modify the critical magnetic Reynolds number by much, but enhances the
saturation level of the Maxwell stress by a factor of a few. We show that the
saturation level of the MRI is characterized by v_{Az}^2 / \eta \Omega, where
v_{Az} is the Alfven speed in the nonlinear regime along the vertical component
of the field. The condition for turbulence and significant transport is given
by v_{Az}^2 / \eta \Omega \gtrsim 1, and this critical value is independent of
the strength and geometry of the magnetic field or the size of the Hall term.
If the magnetic field strength in an accretion disk can be estimated
observationally, and the magnetic Reynolds number v_A^2 / \eta \Omega is larger
than about 30, this would imply the MRI is operating in the disk.Comment: 43 pages, 8 tables, 20 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ,
postscript version also available from
http://www.astro.umd.edu/~sano/publications
Axisymmetric Magnetorotational Instability in Viscous Accretion Disks
Axisymmetric magnetorotational instability (MRI) in viscous accretion disks
is investigated by linear analysis and two-dimensional nonlinear simulations.
The linear growth of the viscous MRI is characterized by the Reynolds number
defined as , where is the Alfv{\'e}n
velocity, is the kinematic viscosity, and is the angular
velocity of the disk. Although the linear growth rate is suppressed
considerably as the Reynolds number decreases, the nonlinear behavior is found
to be almost independent of . At the nonlinear evolutionary stage,
a two-channel flow continues growing and the Maxwell stress increases until the
end of calculations even though the Reynolds number is much smaller than unity.
A large portion of the injected energy to the system is converted to the
magnetic energy. The gain rate of the thermal energy, on the other hand, is
found to be much larger than the viscous heating rate. Nonlinear behavior of
the MRI in the viscous regime and its difference from that in the highly
resistive regime can be explained schematically by using the characteristics of
the linear dispersion relation. Applying our results to the case with both the
viscosity and resistivity, it is anticipated that the critical value of the
Lundquist number for active turbulence
depends on the magnetic Prandtl number in
the regime of and remains constant when , where and is the magnetic diffusivity.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ -- 18 pages, 9 figures, 1 tabl
A Local One-Zone Model of MHD Turbulence in Dwarf Nova Disks
The evolution of the magnetorotational instability (MRI) during the
transition from outburst to quiescence in a dwarf nova disk is investigated
using three-dimensional MHD simulations. The shearing box approximation is
adopted for the analysis, so that the efficiency of angular momentum transport
is studied in a small local patch of the disk: this is usually referred as to a
one-zone model. To take account of the low ionization fraction of the disk, the
induction equation includes both ohmic dissipation and the Hall effect. We
induce a transition from outburst to quiescence by an instantaneous decrease of
the temperature. The evolution of the MRI during the transition is found to be
very sensitive to the temperature of the quiescent disk. As long as the
temperature is higher than a critical value of about 2000 K, MHD turbulence and
angular momentum transport is sustained by the MRI. However, MHD turbulence
dies away within an orbital time if the temperature falls below this critical
value. In this case, the stress drops off by more than 2 orders of magnitude,
and is dominated by the Reynolds stress associated with the remnant motions
from the outburst. The critical temperature depends slightly on the distance
from the central star and the local density of the disk.Comment: 20 pages, 2 tables, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Electronic States and Superconducting Transition Temperature based on the Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid in PrBaCuO
An NQR experiment revealed superconductivity of
PrBaCuO (Pr247) to be realized on CuO double chain
layers and suggests possibility of novel one-dimensional(1D) superconductivity.
To clarify the nature of the 1D superconductivity, we calculate the band
dispersions of Pr247 by using the generalized gradient approximation(GGA). It
indicates that Fermi surface of CuO double chains is well described to the
electronic structure of a quasi-1D system.
Assuming the zigzag Hubbard chain model to be an effective model of the
system, we derive tight binding parameters of the model from a fit to the
result of GGA. Based on the Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid theory, we estimate
transition temperature () of the quasi-1D zigzag Hubbard model from the
calculated value of the Luttinger liquid parameter . The result of
is consistent with that of experiments in Pr247 and it suggests that the
mechanism of the superconductivity is well understood within the concept of the
Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
The Effect of the Hall Term on the Nonlinear Evolution of the Magnetorotational Instability: I. Local Axisymmetric Simulations
The effect of the Hall term on the evolution of the magnetorotational
instability (MRI) in weakly ionized accretion disks is investigated using local
axisymmetric simulations. First, we show that the Hall term has important
effects on the MRI when the temperature and density in the disk is below a few
thousand K and between 10^13 and 10^18 cm^{-3} respectively. Such conditions
can occur in the quiescent phase of dwarf nova disks, or in the inner part
(inside 10 - 100 AU) of protoplanetary disks. When the Hall term is important,
the properties of the MRI are dependent on the direction of the magnetic field
with respect to the angular velocity vector \Omega. If the disk is threaded by
a uniform vertical field oriented in the same sense as \Omega, the axisymmetric
evolution of the MRI is an exponentially growing two-channel flow without
saturation. When the field is oppositely directed to \Omega, however, small
scale fluctuations prevent the nonlinear growth of the channel flow and the MRI
evolves into MHD turbulence. These results are anticipated from the
characteristics of the linear dispersion relation. In axisymmetry on a field
with zero-net flux, the evolution of the MRI is independent of the size of the
Hall term relative to the inductive term. The evolution in this case is
determined mostly by the effect of ohmic dissipation.Comment: 31 pages, 3 tables, 12 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ,
postscript version also available from
http://www.astro.umd.edu/~sano/publications
Ferromagnetism and Superconductivity in the multi-orbital Hubbard Model: Hund's Rule Coupling versus Crystal-Field Splitting
The multi-orbital Hubbard model in one dimension is studied using the
numerical diagonalization method. Due to the effect of the crystal-field
splitting , the fully polarized ferromagnetism which is observed in the
strong coupling regime becomes unstable against the partially polarized
ferromagnetism when the Hund's rule coupling is smaller than a certain
critical value of order of . In the vicinity of the partially polarized
ferromagnetism, the orbital fluctuation develops due to the competition between
the Hund's rule coupling and the crystal-field splitting. The superconducting
phase with the Luttinger liquid parameter is observed for the
singlet ground state in this region.Comment: 4 pages,5 figures,submitted to J.Phys.Soc.Jp
Angular Momentum Transport by MHD Turbulence in Accretion Disks: Gas Pressure Dependence of the Saturation Level of the Magnetorotational Instability
The saturation level of the magnetorotational instability (MRI) is
investigated using three-dimensional MHD simulations. The shearing box
approximation is adopted and the vertical component of gravity is ignored, so
that the evolution of the MRI is followed in a small local part of the disk. We
focus on the dependence of the saturation level of the stress on the gas
pressure, which is a key assumption in the standard alpha disk model. From our
numerical experiments it is found that there is a weak power-law relation
between the saturation level of the Maxwell stress and the gas pressure in the
nonlinear regime; the higher the gas pressure, the larger the stress. Although
the power-law index depends slightly on the initial field geometry, the
relationship between stress and gas pressure is independent of the initial
field strength, and is unaffected by Ohmic dissipation if the magnetic Reynolds
number is at least 10. The relationship is the same in adiabatic calculations,
where pressure increases over time, and nearly-isothermal calculations, where
pressure varies little with time. Our numerical results are qualitatively
consistent with an idea that the saturation level of the MRI is determined by a
balance between the growth of the MRI and the dissipation of the field through
reconnection. The quantitative interpretation of the pressure-stress relation,
however, may require advances in the theoretical understanding of non-steady
magnetic reconnection.Comment: 45 pages, 5 tables, 17 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Superconductivity in a Two-Orbital Hubbard Model with Electron and Hole Fermi Pockets: Application in Iron Oxypnictide Superconductors
We investigate the electronic states of a one-dimensional two-orbital Hubbard
model with band splitting by the exact diagonalization method. The Luttinger
liquid parameter is calculated to obtain superconducting (SC) phase
diagram as a function of on-site interactions: the intra- and inter-orbital
Coulomb and , the Hund coupling , and the pair transfer . In
this model, electron and hole Fermi pockets are produced when the Fermi level
crosses both the upper and lower orbital bands. We find that the system shows
two types of SC phases, the SC \Roman{u'-large} for and the SC
\Roman{u-large} for , in the wide parameter region including both weak
and strong correlation regimes. Pairing correlation functions indicate that the
most dominant pairing for the SC \Roman{u'-large} (SC \Roman{u-large}) is the
intersite (on-site) intraorbital spin-singlet with (without) sign reversal of
the order parameters between two Fermi pockets. The result of the SC
\Roman{u'-large} is consistent with the sign-reversing s-wave pairing that has
recently been proposed for iron oxypnictide superconductors.Comment: 5 pages, 8 figures, to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn., Vol.78, No.12,
p.12470
Modeling the gamma-ray emission produced by runaway cosmic rays in the environment of RX J1713.7-3946
Diffusive shock acceleration in supernova remnants is the most widely invoked
paradigm to explain the Galactic cosmic ray spectrum. Cosmic rays escaping
supernova remnants diffuse in the interstellar medium and collide with the
ambient atomic and molecular gas. From such collisions gamma-rays are created,
which can possibly provide the first evidence of a parent population of runaway
cosmic rays. We present model predictions for the GeV to TeV gamma-ray emission
produced by the collisions of runaway cosmic rays with the gas in the
environment surrounding the shell-type supernova remnant RX J1713.7-3946. The
spectral and spatial distributions of the emission, which depend upon the
source age, the source injection history, the diffusion regime and the
distribution of the ambient gas, as mapped by the LAB and NANTEN surveys, are
studied in detail. In particular, we find for the region surrounding RX
J1713-3946, that depending on the energy one is observing at, one may observe
startlingly different spectra or may not detect any enhanced emission with
respect to the diffuse emission contributed by background cosmic rays. This
result has important implications for current and future gamma-ray experiments.Comment: version published on PAS
Molecular Clouds as Cosmic-Ray Barometers
The advent of high sensitivity, high resolution gamma-ray detectors, together
with a knowledge of the distribution of the atomic hydrogen and especially of
the molecular hydrogen in the Galaxy on sub-degree scales creates a unique
opportunity to explore the flux of cosmic rays in the Galaxy. We here present
the new data on the distribution of the molecular hydrogen from a large region
of the inner Galaxy obtained by the NANTEN Collaboration. We then introduce a
methodology which aims to provide a test bed for current and future gamma-ray
observatories to explore the cosmic ray flux at various positions in our
Galaxy. In particular, for a distribution of molecular clouds, as provided by
the NANTEN survey, and local cosmic ray density as measured at the Earth, we
estimate the expected GeV to TeV gamma-ray signal, which can then be compared
with observations and use to test the cosmic ray flux.Comment: PASJ (in press
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