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Wind-driving protostellar accretion discs – I. Formulation and parameter constraints

TLDR
In this article, a model of weakly ionized, protostellar accretion discs that are threaded by a large-scale, ordered magnetic field and power a centrifugally driven wind is considered.
Abstract
We study a model of weakly ionized, protostellar accretion discs that are threaded by a large-scale, ordered magnetic field and power a centrifugally driven wind. We consider the limiting case where the wind is the main repository of the excess disc angular momentum and generalize the radially localized disc model of Wardle & Konigl, which focused on the ambipolar diffusion regime, to other field diffusivity regimes, notably Hall and Ohm. We present a general formulation of the problem for nearly Keplerian, vertically isothermal discs using both the conductivity-tensor and the multifluid approaches and simplify it to a normalized system of ordinary differential equations in the vertical space coordinate. We determine the relevant parameters of the problem and investigate, using the vertical-hydrostatic-equilibrium approximation and other simplifications, the parameter constraints on physically viable solutions for discs in which the neutral particles are dynamically well coupled to the field already at the mid-plane. When the charged particles constitute a two-component ion-electron plasma, one can identify four distinct sub-regimes in the parameter domain where the Hall diffusivity dominates and three sub-regimes in the Ohm-dominated domain. Two of the Hall sub-regimes can be characterized as being ambipolar diffusion-like and two as being Ohm-like: the properties of one member of the first pair of sub-regimes are identical to those of the ambipolar diffusion regime, whereas one member of the second pair has the same characteristics as one of the Ohm sub-regimes. All the Hall sub-regimes have B rb /lB φb (ratio of radial-to-azimuthal magnetic field amplitudes at the disc surface) > 1, whereas in two Ohm sub-regimes this ratio is < 1. When the two-component plasma consists, instead, of positively and negatively charged grains of equal mass, the entire Hall domain and one of the Ohm sub-regimes with B rb /lB φb | < 1 disappear. All viable solutions require the mid-plane neutral-ion momentum exchange time to be shorter than the local orbital time. We also infer that vertical magnetic squeezing always dominates over gravitational tidal compression in this model. In a follow-up paper we will present exact solutions that test the results of this analysis in the Hall regime.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Wind-driven Accretion in Protoplanetary Disks. I. Suppression of the Magnetorotational Instability and Launching of the Magnetocentrifugal Wind

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors performed local, vertically stratified shearing box MHD simulations of protoplanetary disks (PPDs) at a fiducial radius of 1 AU that take into account the effects of both Ohmic resistivity and ambipolar diffusion (AD).
Journal ArticleDOI

Accretion onto Pre-Main-Sequence Stars

TL;DR: The mechanisms by which protostellar and protoplanetary disks accrete onto low-mass stars are not clear; angular momentum transport by magnetic fields is thought to be involved, but the low ionization conditions in major regions of protoplanets lead to a variety of complex nonideal magnetohydrodynamic effects whose implications are not fully understood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wind-driven Accretion in Protoplanetary Disks. I: Suppression of the Magnetorotational Instability and Launching of the Magnetocentrifugal Wind

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors performed local, vertically stratified shearing box MHD simulations of protoplanetary disks (PPDs) at a fiducial radius of 1 AU that take into account the effects of both Ohmic resistivity and ambipolar diffusion (AD).
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonideal MHD Effects and Magnetic Braking Catastrophe in Protostellar Disk Formation

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that ambipolar diffusion, the dominant non-ideal MHD effect over most of the density range relevant to disk formation, does not enable disk formation at least in 2D.
Journal ArticleDOI

Non-ideal mhd effects and magnetic braking catastrophe in protostellar disk formation

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that ambipolar diffusion (AD) is the dominant non-ideal MHD effect over most of the density range relevant to disk formation, at least in two dimensions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Instability, turbulence, and enhanced transport in accretion disks

TL;DR: In this paper, a summary of what is now known of disk turbulence and some knotty outstanding questions (e.g., what is the physics behind nonlinear field saturation?) for which we may soon begin to develop answers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Star Formation in Molecular Clouds: Observation and Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, star-formation processes occurring on the scale of giant molecular clouds (10 to the 6th solar masses and 10 to the 20th cm) or smaller are discussed, reviewing the results of recent theoretical and observational investigations.
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