Surface Structure in an Accretion Disk Annulus with Comparable Radiation and Gas Pressure

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© 2007. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Omer Blaes et al 2007 ApJ 664 1057 DOI 10.1086/519516

0004-637X/664/2/1057

Abstract

We have employed a three-dimensional energy-conserving radiation MHD code to simulate the vertical structure and thermodynamics of a shearing box whose parameters were chosen so that the radiation and gas pressures would be comparable. The upper layers of this disk segment are magnetically dominated, creating conditions appropriate for both photon bubble and Parker instabilities. We find little evidence for photon bubbles, even though the simulation has enough spatial resolution to see them and their predicted growth rates are high. On the other hand, there is strong evidence for Parker instabilities, and they appear to dominate the evolution of the magnetically supported surface layers. The disk photosphere is complex, with large density inhomogeneities at both the scattering and effective (thermalization) photospheres of the evolving horizontally averaged structure. Both the dominant magnetic support and the inhomogeneities are likely to have strong effects on the spectrum and polarization of thermal photons emerging from the disk atmosphere. The inhomogeneities are also large enough to affect models of reflection spectra from the atmospheres of accretion disks.

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10.1086/519516