Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2000-05-09
Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 318 (2000) 47
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
12 pages, 18 figures, MNRAS accepted
Scientific paper
We excite an epicyclic motion, whose amplitude depends on the vertical position, $z$, in a simulation of a turbulent accretion disc. An epicyclic motion of this kind may be caused by a warping of the disc. By studying how the epicyclic motion decays we can obtain information about the interaction between the warp and the disc turbulence. A high amplitude epicyclic motion decays first by exciting inertial waves through a parametric instability, but its subsequent exponential damping may be reproduced by a turbulent viscosity. We estimate the effective viscosity parameter, $\alpha_{\rm v}$, pertaining to such a vertical shear. We also gain new information on the properties of the disc turbulence in general, and measure the usual viscosity parameter, $\alpha_{\rm h}$, pertaining to a horizontal (Keplerian) shear. We find that, as is often assumed in theoretical studies, $\alpha_{\rm v}$ is approximately equal to $\alpha_{\rm h}$ and both are much less than unity, for the field strengths achieved in our local box calculations of turbulence. In view of the smallness ($\sim 0.01$) of $\alpha_{\rm v}$ and $\alpha_{\rm h}$ we conclude that for $\beta = p_{\rm gas}/p_{\rm mag} \sim 10$ the timescale for diffusion or damping of a warp is much shorter than the usual viscous timescale. Finally, we review the astrophysical implications.
Brandenburg Axel
Nordlund Åke
Ogilvie Gordon I.
Pringle James E.
Stein Robert F.
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