The Stability of Magnetized Rotating Plasmas with Superthermal Fields

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The Stability of Magnetized Rotating Plasmas with Superthermal Fields. / Pessah, Martin Elias; Psaltis, Dimitrios.

I: Astrophysical Journal, Bind 628, Nr. 2, 13.04.2005, s. 879-901.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Pessah, ME & Psaltis, D 2005, 'The Stability of Magnetized Rotating Plasmas with Superthermal Fields', Astrophysical Journal, bind 628, nr. 2, s. 879-901. https://doi.org/10.1086/430940

APA

Pessah, M. E., & Psaltis, D. (2005). The Stability of Magnetized Rotating Plasmas with Superthermal Fields. Astrophysical Journal, 628(2), 879-901. https://doi.org/10.1086/430940

Vancouver

Pessah ME, Psaltis D. The Stability of Magnetized Rotating Plasmas with Superthermal Fields. Astrophysical Journal. 2005 apr. 13;628(2):879-901. https://doi.org/10.1086/430940

Author

Pessah, Martin Elias ; Psaltis, Dimitrios. / The Stability of Magnetized Rotating Plasmas with Superthermal Fields. I: Astrophysical Journal. 2005 ; Bind 628, Nr. 2. s. 879-901.

Bibtex

@article{73f59751e4b14d109327c066859ef9f8,
title = "The Stability of Magnetized Rotating Plasmas with Superthermal Fields",
abstract = "During the last decade it has become evident that the magnetorotational instability is at the heart of the enhanced angular momentum transport in weakly magnetized accretion disks around neutron stars and black holes. In this paper, we investigate the local linear stability of differentially rotating, magnetized flows and the evolution of the magnetorotational instability beyond the weak-field limit. We show that, when superthermal toroidal fields are considered, the effects of both compressibility and magnetic tension forces, which are related to the curvature of toroidal field lines, should be taken fully into account. We demonstrate that the presence of a strong toroidal component in the magnetic field plays a non-trivial role. When strong fields are considered, the strength of the toroidal magnetic field not only modifies the growth rates of the unstable modes but also determines which modes are subject to instabilities. We find that, for rotating configurations with Keplerian laws, the magnetorotational instability is stabilized at low wavenumbers for toroidal Alfven speeds exceeding the geometric mean of the sound speed and the rotational speed. We discuss the significance of our findings for the stability of cold, magnetically dominated, rotating fluids and argue that, for these systems, the curvature of toroidal field lines cannot be neglected even when short wavelength perturbations are considered. We also comment on the implications of our results for the validity of shearing box simulations in which superthermal toroidal fields are generated.",
keywords = "astro-ph",
author = "Pessah, {Martin Elias} and Dimitrios Psaltis",
year = "2005",
month = apr,
day = "13",
doi = "10.1086/430940",
language = "English",
volume = "628",
pages = "879--901",
journal = "Astrophysical Journal",
issn = "0004-637X",
publisher = "Institute of Physics Publishing, Inc",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Stability of Magnetized Rotating Plasmas with Superthermal Fields

AU - Pessah, Martin Elias

AU - Psaltis, Dimitrios

PY - 2005/4/13

Y1 - 2005/4/13

N2 - During the last decade it has become evident that the magnetorotational instability is at the heart of the enhanced angular momentum transport in weakly magnetized accretion disks around neutron stars and black holes. In this paper, we investigate the local linear stability of differentially rotating, magnetized flows and the evolution of the magnetorotational instability beyond the weak-field limit. We show that, when superthermal toroidal fields are considered, the effects of both compressibility and magnetic tension forces, which are related to the curvature of toroidal field lines, should be taken fully into account. We demonstrate that the presence of a strong toroidal component in the magnetic field plays a non-trivial role. When strong fields are considered, the strength of the toroidal magnetic field not only modifies the growth rates of the unstable modes but also determines which modes are subject to instabilities. We find that, for rotating configurations with Keplerian laws, the magnetorotational instability is stabilized at low wavenumbers for toroidal Alfven speeds exceeding the geometric mean of the sound speed and the rotational speed. We discuss the significance of our findings for the stability of cold, magnetically dominated, rotating fluids and argue that, for these systems, the curvature of toroidal field lines cannot be neglected even when short wavelength perturbations are considered. We also comment on the implications of our results for the validity of shearing box simulations in which superthermal toroidal fields are generated.

AB - During the last decade it has become evident that the magnetorotational instability is at the heart of the enhanced angular momentum transport in weakly magnetized accretion disks around neutron stars and black holes. In this paper, we investigate the local linear stability of differentially rotating, magnetized flows and the evolution of the magnetorotational instability beyond the weak-field limit. We show that, when superthermal toroidal fields are considered, the effects of both compressibility and magnetic tension forces, which are related to the curvature of toroidal field lines, should be taken fully into account. We demonstrate that the presence of a strong toroidal component in the magnetic field plays a non-trivial role. When strong fields are considered, the strength of the toroidal magnetic field not only modifies the growth rates of the unstable modes but also determines which modes are subject to instabilities. We find that, for rotating configurations with Keplerian laws, the magnetorotational instability is stabilized at low wavenumbers for toroidal Alfven speeds exceeding the geometric mean of the sound speed and the rotational speed. We discuss the significance of our findings for the stability of cold, magnetically dominated, rotating fluids and argue that, for these systems, the curvature of toroidal field lines cannot be neglected even when short wavelength perturbations are considered. We also comment on the implications of our results for the validity of shearing box simulations in which superthermal toroidal fields are generated.

KW - astro-ph

U2 - 10.1086/430940

DO - 10.1086/430940

M3 - Journal article

VL - 628

SP - 879

EP - 901

JO - Astrophysical Journal

JF - Astrophysical Journal

SN - 0004-637X

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 34382848