Chaos in Turbulence Driven by the Magnetorotational Instability

Chaotic flow is studied in a series of numerical magnetohydrodynamical simulations that use the shearing box formalism. This mimics important features of local accretion disk dynamics. The magnetorotational instability gives rise to flow turbulence, and quantitative chaos parameters, such as the lar...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Main Authors: Winters, W, Balbus, S, Hawley, J
Formato: Journal article
Idioma:English
Publicado: 2003
Descripción
Summary:Chaotic flow is studied in a series of numerical magnetohydrodynamical simulations that use the shearing box formalism. This mimics important features of local accretion disk dynamics. The magnetorotational instability gives rise to flow turbulence, and quantitative chaos parameters, such as the largest Lyapunov exponent, can be measured. Linear growth rates appear in these exponents even when the flow is fully turbulent. The extreme sensitivity to initial conditions associated with chaotic flows has practical implications, the most important of which is that hundreds of orbital times are needed to extract a meaningful average for the stress. If the evolution time in a disk is less than this, the classical $\alpha$ formalism will break down.