4.7 Article

Shearing-box simulations of MRI-driven turbulence in weakly collisional accretion discs

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 486, Issue 3, Pages 4013-4029

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stz1111

Keywords

accretion, accretion discs; instabilities; MHD; plasmas; turbulence

Funding

  1. NSF [AST 13-33612, AST 1715054]
  2. Simons Investigator award from the Simons Foundation
  3. Rutherford Discovery Fellowship
  4. Marsden Fund
  5. NASA [NNX17AK63G]

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We present a systematic shearing-box investigation of magnetorotational instability (MRI)-driven turbulence in a weakly collisional plasma by including the effects of an anisotropic pressure stress, i.e. anisotropic (Braginskii) viscosity. We constrain the pressure anisotropy (Delta p) to lie within the stability bounds that would be otherwise imposed by kinetic microinstabilities. We explore a broad region of parameter space by considering different Reynolds numbers and magnetic-field configurations, including net vertical flux, net toroidal-vertical flux, and zero net flux. Remarkably, we find that the level of turbulence and angular-momentum transport are not greatly affected by large anisotropic viscosities: the Maxwell and Reynolds stresses do not differ much from the MHD result. Angular-momentum transport in Braginskii MHD still depends strongly on isotropic dissipation, e.g. the isotropic magnetic Prandtl number, even when the anisotropic viscosity is orders of magnitude larger than the isotropic diffusivities. Braginskii viscosity nevertheless changes the flowstructure, rearranging the turbulence to largely counter the parallel rate of strain from the background shear. We also show that the volume-averaged pressure anisotropy and anisotropic viscous transport decrease with increasing isotropic Reynolds number (Re); e.g. in simulations with net vertical field, the ratio of anisotropic to Maxwell stress (alpha(A)/alpha(M)) decreases from similar to 0.5 to similar to 0.1 as we move from Re similar to 10(3) to Re similar to 10(4), while < 4 pi Delta p/B-2 > -> 0. Anisotropic transport may thus become negligible at high Re. Anisotropic viscosity nevertheless becomes the dominant source of heating at large Re, accounting for >= 50 per cent of the plasma heating. We conclude by briefly discussing the implications of our results for radiatively inefficient accretion flows on to black holes.

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