565 research outputs found

    Inviscid helical magnetorotational instability in cylindrical Taylor-Couette flow

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    This paper presents the analysis of axisymmetric helical magnetorotational instability (HMRI) in the inviscid limit, which is relevant for astrophysical conditions. The inductionless approximation defined by zero magnetic Prandtl number is adopted to distinguish the HMRI from the standard MRI in the cylindrical Taylor-Couette flow subject to a helical magnetic field. Using a Chebyshev collocation method convective and absolute instability thresholds are computed in terms of the Elsasser number for a fixed ratio of inner and outer radii \lambda=2 and various ratios of rotation rates and helicities of the magnetic field. It is found that the extension of self-sustained HMRI modes beyond the Rayleigh limit does not reach the astrophysically relevant Keplerian rotation profile not only in the narrow- but also in the finite-gap approximation. The Keppler limit can be attained only by the convective HMRI mode provided that the boundaries are perfectly conducting. However, this mode requires not only a permanent external excitation to be observable but also has a long axial wave length, which is not compatible with limited thickness of astrophysical accretion disks.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, published version with a few typos correcte

    On the connection between the magneto-elliptic and magneto-rotational instabilities

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    It has been recently suggested that the magneto-rotational instability (MRI) is a limiting case of the magneto-elliptic instability (MEI). This limit is obtained for horizontal modes in the presence of rotation and an external vertical magnetic field, when the aspect ratio of the elliptic streamlines tends to infinite. In this paper we unveil the link between these previously unconnected mechanisms, explaining both the MEI and the MRI as different manifestations of the same Magneto-Elliptic-Rotational Instability (MERI). The growth rates are found and the influence of the magnetic and rotational effects is explained, in particular the effect of the magnetic field on the range of negative Rossby numbers at which the horizontal instability is excited. Furthermore, we show how the horizontal rotational MEI in the rotating shear flow limit links to the MRI by the use of the local shearing box model, typically used in the study of accretion discs. In such limit the growth rates of the two instability types coincide for any power-type background angular velocity radial profile with negative exponent corresponding to the value of the Rossby number of the rotating shear flow. The MRI requirement for instability is that the background angular velocity profile is a decreasing function of the distance from the centre of the disk which corresponds to the horizontal rotational MEI requirement of negative Rossby numbers. Finally a physical interpretation of the horizontal instability, based on a balance between the strain, the Lorentz force and the Coriolis force is given.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in the Journal of Fluid Mechanic

    Wave of nonequilibrium ionization in a gas

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    Propagation model for plane ionization wave in uniform electric fiel

    Hydromagnetic Instability in plane Couette Flow

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    We study the stability of a compressible magnetic plane Couette flow and show that compressibility profoundly alters the stability properties if the magnetic field has a component perpendicular to the direction of flow. The necessary condition of a newly found instability can be satisfied in a wide variety of flows in laboratory and astrophysical conditions. The instability can operate even in a very strong magnetic field which entirely suppresses other MHD instabilities. The growth time of this instability can be rather short and reach 10\sim 10 shear timescales.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. To appear on PR

    Thermo-Rotational Instability in Plasma Disks Around Compact Objects

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    Differentially rotating plasma disks, around compact objects, that are imbedded in a ``seed'' magnetic field are shown to develop vertically localized ballooning modes that are driven by the combined radial gradient of the rotation frequency and vertical gradients of the plasma density and temperature. When the electron mean free path is shorter than the disk height and the relevant thermal conductivity can be neglected, the vertical particle flows produced by of these modes have the effect to drive the density and temperature profiles toward the ``adiabatic condition'' where ηT(dlnT/dz)/(dlnn/dz)=2/3\eta_{T}\equiv(dlnT/dz)/(dlnn/dz)=2/3. Here TT is the plasma temperature and nn the particle density. The faster growth rates correspond to steeper temperature profiles (ηT>2/3)(\eta_{T}>2/3) such as those produced by an internal (e.g., viscous) heating process. In the end, ballooning modes excited for various values of ηT\eta_{T} can lead to the evolution of the disk into a different current carrying configuration such as a sequence of plasma rings

    Ionization Instability of a Plasma with Hot Electrons

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    Ionization instability of plasma with hot electron

    Paradox of inductionless magnetorotational instability in a Taylor-Couette flow with a helical magnetic field

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    We consider the magnetorotational instability (MRI) of a hydrodynamically stable Taylor-Couette flow with a helical external magnetic field in the inductionless approximation defined by a zero magnetic Prandtl number (\Pm=0). This leads to a considerable simplification of the problem eventually containing only hydrodynamic variables. First, we point out that the energy of any perturbation growing in the presence of magnetic field has to grow faster without the field. This is a paradox because the base flow is stable without the magnetic while it is unstable in the presence of a helical magnetic field without being modified by the latter as it has been found recently by Hollerbach and Rudiger [Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 124501 (2005)]. We revisit this problem by using a Chebyshev collocation method to calculate the eigenvalue spectrum of the linearized problem. In this way, we confirm that MRI with helical magnetic field indeed works in the inductionless limit where the destabilization effect appears as an effective shift of the Rayleigh line. Second, we integrate the linearized equations in time to study the transient behavior of small amplitude perturbations, thus showing that the energy arguments are correct as well. However, there is no real contradiction between both facts. The linear stability theory predicts the asymptotic development of an arbitrary small-amplitude perturbation, while the energy stability theory yields the instant growth rate of any particular perturbation, but it does not account for the evolution of this perturbation.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Magnetoelliptic Instabilities

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    We consider the stability of a configuration consisting of a vertical magnetic field in a planar flow on elliptical streamlines in ideal hydromagnetics. In the absence of a magnetic field the elliptical flow is universally unstable (the ``elliptical instability''). We find this universal instability persists in the presence of magnetic fields of arbitrary strength, although the growthrate decreases somewhat. We also find further instabilities due to the presence of the magnetic field. One of these, a destabilization of Alfven waves, requires the magnetic parameter to exceed a certain critical value. A second, involving a mixing of hydrodynamic and magnetic modes, occurs for all magnetic-field strengths. These instabilities may be important in tidally distorted or otherwise elliptical disks. A disk of finite thickness is stable if the magnetic fieldstrength exceeds a critical value, similar to the fieldstrength which suppresses the magnetorotational instability.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journa

    Viscoresistive MHD Configurations of Plasma in Accretion Disks

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    We present a discussion of two-dimensional magneto-hydrodynamics (MHD) configurations, concerning the equilibria of accretion disks of a strongly magnetized astrophysical object. We set up a viscoresistive scenario which generalizes previous two-dimensional analyses by reconciling the ideal MHD coupling of the vertical and the radial equilibria within the disk with the standard mechanism of the angular momentum transport, relying on dissipative properties of the plasma configuration. The linear features of the considered model are analytically developed and the non-linear configuration problem is addressed, by fixing the entire disk profile at the same order of approximation. Indeed, the azimuthal and electron force balance equations are no longer automatically satisfied when poloidal currents and matter fluxes are included in the problem. These additional components of the equilibrium configuration induce a different morphology of the magnetic flux surface, with respect to the ideal and simply rotating disk.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures. To appear on the Proceedings of the Second Italian-Pakistani Workshop on Relativistic Astrophysic

    Robustly Unstable Eigenmodes of the Magnetoshearing Instability in Accretion Disk

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    The stability of nonaxisymmetric perturbations in differentially rotating astrophysical accretion disks is analyzed by fully incorporating the properties of shear flows. We verify the presence of discrete unstable eigenmodes with complex and pure imaginary eigenvalues, without any artificial disk edge boundaries, unlike Ogilvie & Pringle(1996)'s claim. By developing the mathematical theory of a non-self-adjoint system, we investigate the nonlocal behavior of eigenmodes in the vicinity of Alfven singularities at omega_D=omega_A, where omega_D is the Doppler-shifted wave frequency and omega_A=k_// v_A is the Alfven frequency. The structure of the spectrum of discrete eigenmodes is discussed and the magnetic field and wavenumber dependence of the growth rate are obtained. Exponentially growing modes are present even in a region where the local dispersion relation theory claims to have stable eigenvalues. The velocity field created by an eigenmode is obtained, which explains the anomalous angular momentum transport in the nonlinear stage of this stability.Comment: 11pages, 11figures, to be published in ApJ. For associated eps files, see http://dino.ph.utexas.edu/~knoguchi
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