A&A 483, 815-830 (2008)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20079307
Turbulent transport and its effect on the dead zone in protoplanetary discs
M. Ilgner and R. P. NelsonAstronomy Unit, Queen Mary, University of London, Mile End Road, London E1 4NS, UK
e-mail: [M.Ilgner;R.P.Nelson]@qmul.ac.uk
(Received 21 December 2007 / Accepted 13 February 2008)
Abstract
Context. Protostellar accretion discs have cool, dense midplanes where externally originating
ionisation sources
such as X-rays or cosmic rays are unable to penetrate. This suggests that for
a wide range of radii, MHD turbulence
can only be sustained in the surface layers where the ionisation fraction
is sufficiently high. A dead zone is expected to exist near the midplane,
such that active accretion only occurs near the upper and lower disc surfaces.
Recent work, however, suggests that under suitable conditions the dead zone
may be enlivened by turbulent transport of ions from the surface layers
into the dense interior.
Aims. In this paper we present a suite of simulations that examine where, and under which conditions,
a dead zone can be enlivened by turbulent mixing.
Methods. We use three-dimensional, multifluid shearing box MHD simulations,
which include vertical stratification,
ionisation chemistry, ohmic resistivity, and ionisation due to X-rays from the central
protostar. We compare the results of the MHD simulations with a simple reaction-diffusion model.
Results. The simulations show that in the absence of gas-phase heavy metals, such as magnesium,
turbulent mixing has essentially no effect on the dead zone. The addition of a relatively low
abundance of magnesium, however, increases the recombination time and allows
turbulent mixing of ions to enliven the dead zone completely beyond a distance of 5 AU from
the central star, for our particular disc model.
Conclusions. During the late stages of protoplanetary disc evolution, when small grains have been
depleted and the disc surface density has decreased below its high initial value,
the structure of the dead zone may be significantly altered by the action of turbulent
transport. This may have important consequences for ongoing planet formation
in these discs.
Key words: accretion, accretion disks -- magnetohydornamics (MHD) -- stars: planetary systems: protoplanetary disks -- stars: planetary systems: formation
© ESO 2008
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