Accretion Outbursts in Self-gravitating Protoplanetary Disks (1409.3891v1)
Abstract: We improve on our previous treatments of long-term evolution of protostellar disks by explicitly solving disk self-gravity in two dimensions. The current model is an extension of the one-dimensional layered accretion disk model of Bae et al. We find that gravitational instability (GI)-induced spiral density waves heat disks via compressional heating (i.e. $P\rm{d}V$ work), and can trigger accretion outbursts by activating the magnetorotational instability (MRI) in the magnetically inert disk dead-zone. The GI-induced spiral waves propagate well inside of gravitationally unstable region before they trigger outbursts at $R \lesssim 1$ AU where GI cannot be sustained. This long-range propagation of waves cannot be reproduced with the previously used local $\alpha$ treatments for GI. In our standard model where zero dead-zone residual viscosity ($\alpha_{\rm rd}$) is assumed, the GI-induced stress measured at the onset of outbursts is locally as large as $0.01$ in terms of the generic $\alpha$ parameter. However, as suggested in our previous one-dimensional calculations, we confirm that the presence of a small but finite $\alpha_{\rm rd}$ triggers thermally-driven bursts of accretion instead of the GI + MRI-driven outbursts that are observed when $\alpha_{\rm rd}=0$. The inclusion of non-zero residual viscosity in the dead-zone decreases the importance of GI soon after mass feeding from the envelope cloud ceases. During the infall phase while the central protostar is still embedded, our models stay in a quiescent accretion phase with $\dot{M}{acc}\sim10{-8}-10{-7}~M{\odot}~{\rm yr{-1}}$ over $60~\%$ of the time and spend less than $15~\%$ of the infall phase in accretion outbursts.
Sponsor
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.