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Magnetic and vertical shear instabilities in accretion discs
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1998
Year
Rotation LawEngineeringSolar ConvectionPlasma PhysicsMagnetismAccretion DiscsPlasma TheoryNumerical SimulationMagnetohydrodynamicsPlasma ConfinementAnisotropic MaterialPhysicsVertical Shear InstabilitiesPlasma InstabilityMagnetic ConfinementSpace WeatherAstrophysicsNatural SciencesNon-axisymmetric Plasma ConfigurationsHydrodynamicsVertical CoordinatesMagnetospheric PhysicsMagnetic PropertyMagnetic Field
The stability properties of magnetized discs rotating with angular velocity Ω = Ω(s, z), dependent on both the radial and the vertical coordinates s and z, are considered. Such a rotation law is adequate for many astrophysical discs (e.g., galactic and protoplanetary discs, as well as accretion discs in binaries). In general, the angular velocity depends on height, even in thin accretion discs. A linear stability analysis is performed in the Boussinesq approximation, and the dispersion relation is obtained for short-wavelength perturbations. Any dependence of Ω on z can destabilize the flow. This concerns primarily small-scale perturbations for which the stabilizing effect of buoyancy is strongly suppressed due to the energy exchange with the surrounding plasma. For a weak magnetic field, instability of discs is mainly associated with vertical shear, whilst for an intermediate magnetic field the magnetic shear instability, first considered by Chandrasekhar and Velikhov, is more efficient. This instability is caused by the radial shear which is typically much stronger than the vertical shear. Therefore the growth time for the magnetic shear instability is much shorter than for the vertical shear instability. A relatively strong magnetic field can suppress both these instabilities. The vertical shear instability could be the source of turbulence in protoplanetary discs, where the conductivity is low.