The role of zonal flows in disc gravito-turbulence

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Abstract

The work presented here focuses on the role of zonal flows in the self-sustenance of gravitoturbulence in accretion discs. The numerical analysis is conducted using a bespoke pseudospectral code in fully compressible, non-linear conditions. The disc in question, which is modelled using the shearing sheet approximation, is assumed to be self-gravitating, viscous, and thermally diffusive; a constant cooling time-scale is also considered. Zonal flows are found to emerge at the onset of gravito-turbulence and they remain closely linked to the turbulent state. A cycle of zonal flow formation and destruction is established, mediated by a slow mode instability (which allows zonal flows to grow) and a non-axisymmetric instability (which disrupts the zonal flow), which is found to repeat numerous times. It is in fact the disruptive action of the non-axisymmetric instability to form new leading and trailing shearing waves, allowing energy to be extracted from the background flow and ensuring the self-sustenance of the gravito-turbulent regime.

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APA

Vanon, R. (2018). The role of zonal flows in disc gravito-turbulence. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 477(3), 3683–3693. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty759

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