Title: Magnetic star-disk interaction
1Magnetic star-disk interaction
- Claudio Zanni
- Laboratoire dAstrophysique de Grenoble
5th JETSET School January 8th 12th
2008 Galway - Ireland
2Observational evidences
- CTTS have dynamically important surface magnetic
fields B 1-3 kG - (Valenti Johns-Krull 2004)
- Redshifted absorption features in inverse
P-Cygni profiles of H?-? lines - reveal accreting material at free-fall speed (gt
100 km s-1) (Edwards et al. - 1994)
- Hot spots can be inferred from photometric and
colour variability (Bouvier et - al. 1995)
- Rotational modulation of light curves suggests
star rotation periods around 3- - 10d (Bouvier et al. 1993) origin of
stellar spin-down?
3A simple model
- The flow is channelled into funnel flows
terminating with an accretion shock on the star
surface
- Accretion disk is truncated at a few stellar
radii by the interaction with the (dipolar)
stellar magnetosphere.
4 with some limitations
- Spectropolarimetric observations of CTTs suggest
that the stellar field is more complex than
dipolar. - Ex. V2129 Oph (Donati et al. 2007)
- - octupole 1.2 kG
- - dipole 0.35 kG
- Photometric and spectroscopic variations of AA
Tau determined by periodic occultations of a disk
warped by the interaction with an inclined
dipolar magnetosphere intrinsically 3D problem
5The ingredients of the problem
- Outer accretion disk
- (torque viscous, disk wind)
- Stellar magnetosphere
- connecting the rotating star and
- the disk
- Outflows disk winds, reconnection driven
outflows, stellar winds
- System characterized by three radii
- Outer radius Rout
- Truncation radius Rt
- Corotation radius Rco
6What analytical models can do?
- No analytical model which takes into account all
the elements of the scenario (accretion disk,
accretion columns, stellar magnetosphere,
outflows) is currently (and probably it will
never be) available.
- Parts of the problem can be solved separately
- - Localization of the truncation radius Rt
- - Structure of the accretion columns
- - Structure of the magnetically torqued
accretion disk - - Angular momentum exchange between the
star and the disk -
- . with some approximation
7The truncation radius
(N.B. located below corotation radius)
- Alfvén radius (Elsner Lamb 1977)
- (ram pressure of a spherical envelope accreting
at free-fall speed magnetic pressure of a
dipole)
(Ghosh Lamb 1979, Konigl 1991, Long 2005)
Can a weak ( 100G) dipolar component truncate
a disk accreting at 10-8 Msun yr-1? Probably not
(Arons 1993, Wang 1996, Ostriker Shu 1995)
(Bessolaz et al. 2008)
8Accretion columns
- Trans-sonic solutions can be calculated (ex.
Koldoba et al. 2002)
- Passage of the sonic point and therefore
accretion is controlled by thermal pressure at
the base of the accretion column - Thermal energy greater than what is available in
a thin accretion disk
- Limitations sub-Alfvenic flow, force-free
dipolar fieldlines
9Torqued disk structure
- It is possible to calculate the effects of the
magnetospheric torques on the structure of the
disk (ex. Kluzniak Rappaport 2007)
- The magnetospheric torque brakes down the disk
rotation inside the corotation radius and forces
the disk to co-rotate with the star
- Limitations vertically averaged disk model,
a-priori hypothesis on B?
10Putting the pieces together numerical simulations
- Many numerical simulations do not have strong
enough magnetic fields to truncate the disk and
produce accretion columns (Hayashi et al. 1996,
Miller Stone 1997, Kuker et al. 2003)
Kuker et al. (2003)
- First accretion columns simulated in 2002
(Romanova et al. 2002) assuming a magnetic field
in equipartition with the disk energy ( 1 kG)
Romanova et al. (2002)
11Typical initial conditions
- Dipolar field aligned with the rotation
- axis of the star
- Resistive (viscous) Keplerian accretion disk
- Resistivity (viscosity)
- Field in equipartition with the thermal
- pressure of the disk at the initial
- truncation radius Rin
- dominant magnetic torque
- star (M 0.5Msun, R 2Rsun) modeled as
- perfect conductor rotating with a 4.5 days
- period (? 0.1?k, Rco 4.6 R)
- MHD fluid equations solved with the PLUTO code
(Godunov CT method)
12Movies
As seen in 3D
In 2D
13Disk truncation
- Disk truncated in equipartition
- conditions
- Magnetosphere represents a magnetic wall for
such an accretion flow
- Confirms analytical results contained in
Bessolaz et al. (2008)
14Funnel flow dynamics
- Thermal pressure gradient uplifts matter at Rin
into the funnel flow and slows down matter fall
pressure comes from the compression
against the magnetic wall - Centrifugal barrier always negligible
matter is braked along funnel flow - Transport of angular momentum dominated by
advection (Fkin r?V?Vp) at the base of the
funnel and by magnetic torque (Fmag rB?Bp) at
the star surface
15Star-disk torques general ideas
- How it is possible to extract this excess
angular momentum?
- Extended magnetosphere, connected beyond Rco
(Ghosh Lamb 1978) does not work due to limited
size of magnetosphere (Matt Pudritz 2005)
- X-wind extracting the disk angular momentum
BEFORE it falls onto the star surface (Shu et al
1994) is a wind like that possible?
- Stellar wind accretion powered stellar wind
(Matt Pudritz 2005), reconnection X-Wind
(Ferreira et al. 2000)
16Interaction regimes
- Compact magnetosphere (Rin lt Rout lt Rco)
- no braking torques are present
- except for outflows
Accretor
- Extended magnetosphere (Rin lt Rco lt Rout)
- disk can extract angular momentum
- (disk locked state)
- Propeller (Rin gt Rco)
- disk truncated beyond corotation, no
- accretion columns, only spin-down
- torques
Propeller
(Matt Pudritz 2004)
17State 1 compact magnetosphere
(? 0.1 B 800 G)
- All fieldlines beyond corotation magnetic
surface (yellow line) are opened - The opened stellar and disk fieldlines are
separated by a strong current sheet along which
numerical reconnection phenomena can occur as
well as episodic mass outflows - CME-like ejection site close to the base of the
accretion column. No X-winds.
18State 1 compact magnetosphere
(? 0.1 B 800 G)
- After initial strong transients the accretion
rate (and hot spot luminosity) shows - an almost stationary behavior
- Variability may occur on the longer accretion
time-scale - The magnetic torque measured on the closed
fieldlines really small (weak - accretion rate)
- The star is always braked along the opened field
lines
19State 2 extended magnetosphere
(? 1 B 800 G)
- Magnetosphere stays connected up to a radius
2.5 (Rco 1.6) - The current sheet is located further from the
star and the episodic outflows are weaker - The disk viscosity is efficient enough in the
connected region in order to remove radially both
the disk and the stellar angular momentum as to
provide mass to the accretion columns.
20State 2 extended magnetosphere
(? 1 B 800 G)
- Accretion rate (and hot spot luminosity)
regularly oscillates with a 1.5-2 P period
(mismatch between magnetospheric and viscous
torque) - Even if part of the disk magnetically connected
to the star beyond Rco the disk-locked torque
always spins up the star - The star is always braked along the opened field
lines zero-torque state?
21Magnetic braking stellar wind
- Mwind 8 10-11 Msun yr-1
- Strongly magnetized (? 10-3)
- Lever arm RA/R0 15
22State 3a propeller
(? 1 B 1.6 kG)
- Propeller regime
- The trucation criterium (? 1) valid also
beyond corotation - Can be this state maintained for long timescales?
23State 3a propeller
(? 1 B 1.6 kG)
- The star is braked both along the closed and
opened field lines - The accretor solutions are in an almost
zero-torque condition - The propeller solution always spins-down the
star
24Beyond dipoles and axisymmetry 3D simulations
- Technical issue curvilinear geometries
(cylindrical, spherical) introduce singularities
cartesian geometry cannot describe correctly the
surface of the star and the disk (putting a
sphere in a cube) - Optimal solution cubed sphere
Koldoba et al. (2003)
- Problems non-orthogonal metric, interpolation
between 6 sectors
25Romanova et al. (2003, 2004)
- Inclined dipole varying the angle ? between the
rotation axis and the magnetic moment ?
26Romanova et al. (2003)
? 15o
? 60o
- Two streams funnel flow
- FF located 30o downstream (FF rotates faster
than the star) - Warped accretion flow perpendicular to ?
- Funnel flow more complicated
- Direct accretion on the poles
- Disk depleted of material
27Romanova et al. (2003)
- Higher accretion rate for higher ?
- Torque on the star always positive
- Higher initially for higher ? but then less
matter is accreted in outer part of the disk
28Romanova et al. (2004)
- ? 15o
- Kinetic energy flux on the star converted in
radiation - One peak of intensity during one period for i lt
60o - Two peaks for i gt 60o
29Long et al. 2007
- Accretion on inclined quadrupolardipolar field