Bardeen-Petterson alignment, jets, and magnetic truncation in GRMHD simulations of tilted thin accretion discs
| Authors |
|
|---|---|
| Publication date | 07-2019 |
| Journal | Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society |
| Volume | Issue number | 487 | 1 |
| Pages (from-to) | 550-561 |
| Organisations |
|
| Abstract |
Prevalent around luminous accreting black holes, thin discs are
challenging to resolve in numerical simulations. When the disc and black
hole angular momentum vectors are misaligned, the challenge becomes
extreme, requiring adaptive meshes to follow the disc proper as it moves
through the computational grid. With our new high-performance general
relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) code H-AMR, we have simulated
the thinnest accretion disc to date, of aspect ratio H/R ≈ 0.03 ≈
1.7°, around a rapidly spinning (a ≈ 0.9) black hole, using a
cooling function. Initially tilted at 10°, the disc warps inside
˜5 rg into alignment with the black hole, where
rg is the gravitational radius. This is the first
demonstration of Bardeen-Petterson alignment in MHD with viscosity
self-consistently generated by magnetized turbulence. The disc develops
a low-density high-viscosity (αeff ˜ 1.0)
magnetic-pressure-dominated inner region at r ≲ 25rg
that rapidly empties itself into the black hole. This inner region may,
in reality, due to thermal decoupling of ions and electrons, evaporate
into a radiatively inefficient accretion flow if, as we propose, the
cooling time exceeds the accretion time set by the order unity effective
viscosity. We furthermore find the unexpected result that even our very
thin disc can sustain large-scale vertical magnetic flux on the black
hole, which launches powerful relativistic jets that carry 20-50 per
cent of the accretion power along the angular momentum vector of the
outer tilted disc, providing a potential explanation for the origin of
jets in radio-loud quasars.
|
| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz834 |
| Other links | https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2019MNRAS.487..550L/abstract |
| Downloads |
Bardeen–Petterson alignment
(Final published version)
|
| Permalink to this page | |