ArXiv TLDR

Beyond the $α$ model: scaling the wind-driven accretion rate in protoplanetary disks using systematic non-ideal magnetohydrodynamical simulations

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2605.04456

Haruhi Enomoto, Shoji Mori, Satoshi Okuzumi

astro-ph.EP

TLDR

This paper introduces the SBD scheme for MHD simulations to derive systematic scaling laws for wind-driven accretion rates in protoplanetary disks.

Key contributions

  • Introduced Super-Box-scale Diffusion (SBD) scheme to enable stable, long-term wind-driven accretion simulations.
  • Validated SBD scheme against self-similar solutions, showing 23-28% agreement in accretion rate dependencies.
  • Derived new power-law scalings for mass accretion rate based on local disk properties, replacing the alpha parameter.
  • These scalings predict accretion rates within a factor of 2-3 across a wide parameter space of disk conditions.

Why it matters

The alpha prescription for disk accretion lacks a direct physical basis. This paper provides systematic, physically-grounded scaling laws for wind-driven accretion rates. These new relations directly link local disk properties to mass accretion, significantly improving models of disk evolution and planet formation.

Original Abstract

Magnetically driven mass accretion in protoplanetary disks plays a crucial role in understanding disk evolution and planet formation. However, the $α$ prescription lacks a direct connection to physical processes, and no systematic scaling law yet exists for the accretion rate as a function of disk quantities. While local shearing-box simulations offer a powerful approach to analyzing accretion structure at low computational cost, they suffer from a problem: the toroidal magnetic field generated by Keplerian shear accumulates within the computational domain, disrupting a geometry consistent with global wind-driven accretion. In this study, we introduce the super-box-scale diffusion (SBD) scheme into non-ideal MHD shearing-box simulations. The SBD scheme continuously damps the horizontally averaged horizontal magnetic field components, thereby mitigating this problem and maintaining the field-line symmetry required for global wind-driven accretion for more than 500 orbital periods. Comparison with self-similar solutions supports the SBD method, with the vertical structure and plasma-beta dependence of the accretion rate agreeing to within 23--28\%. We then conduct a parameter survey of 46 cases using a magnetic diffusivity table constructed from ionization equilibrium calculations, covering disk radius, surface density, magnetic field strength, and dust-to-gas ratio. We find that the surface field-line pitch and mass accretion rate follow power-law scalings with the midplane plasma beta, an effective ambipolar Elsasser number, and the normalized thickness of the magnetically active layer. These relations reproduce the numerical results to within a factor of 2--3 across the explored parameter space and, in most cases, to within a factor of 2. They provide a framework for predicting the mass accretion rate from local disk physical quantities without invoking an $α$ parameter.

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