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A&A 367, 170-182 (2001)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20000404
The effect of rotation on the buoyant rise of magnetic flux tubes in accretion disks
U. ZieglerAstrophysikalisches Institut Potsdam, An der Sternwarte 16, 14482 Potsdam, Germany
(Received 18 September 2000 / Accepted 29 November 2000)
Abstract
The dynamics of buoyant magnetic flux tubes in thin accretion disks
is studied under isothermal conditions
by means of numerical simulations.
The influence of rotation
on the rising behavior of the flux tube
is examined and the role of a weak magnetic field line twist within the
tube is investigated.
By employing the adaptive mesh code NIRVANA
the 3D simulations
have effective resolution higher than in any previous
numerical work on that topic.
The fate of the flux tube strongly depends
on the presence or absence of rotation respective differential rotation.
Rotation effectively slows down the vertical ascend of the flux tube largely
as a consequence of the Coriolis force acting on the surrounding flow which,
in turn, reacts upon the tube.
The detailed behavior also depends on the amount of twist.
In accretion disks,
a weakly twisted flux tube is disrupted and its rise is halted due to
the impact of the magnetic shear instability which is driven by the
interaction between the background
rotational shear flow and (poloidal) twist field. As a consequence, the
magnetic structure is captured in the inner disk region (z< H0, H0:
disk scale height) a much longer time than suggested by the buoyant
time scale in a non-rotating atmosphere.
Untwisted accretion disk flux tubes
do not break up quickly into pieces,
as was found for corresponding tubes embedded in a non-rotating environment,
but retain some degree of coherence albeit the stabilizing effect of twist
is missing.
In general, the numerical results are in gross contradiction to what postulates
a highly simplified 1D picture based on the thin flux tube approximation.
Key words: MHD -- instabilities -- turbulence -- magnetic fields
Offprint request: U. Ziegler, uziegler@aip.de
© ESO 2001
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