Nonlinear Outcome of Gravitational Instability in Cooling, Gaseous Disks
Preprint
- 28 January 2001
Abstract
Thin, Keplerian accretion disks generically become gravitationally unstable at large radius. I investigate the nonlinear outcome of such instability in cool disks using razor-thin, local, numerical models. Cooling, characterized by a constant cooling time t_c, drives the instability. I show analytically that, if the disk can reach a steady state in which heating by dissipation of turbulence balances cooling, then the dimensionless angular momentum flux density \alpha = ((9/4) \gamma (\gamma-1) \Omega t_c)^{-1}. Numerical experiments show that: (1) if t_c \gtrsim 3\Omega^{-1} then the disk reaches a steady, gravito-turbulent state in which Q \sim 1 and cooling is balanced by heating due to dissipation of turbulence; (2) if t_c \lesssim 3\Omega^{-1}, then the disk fragments, possibly forming planets or stars; (3) in a steady, gravito-turbulent state, surface density structures have a characteristic physical scale \sim 64 G \Sigma/\Omega^2 that is independent of the size of the computational domain.Keywords
All Related Versions
- Version 1, 2001-01-28, ArXiv
- Published version: The Astrophysical Journal, 553 (1), 174.
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