Péridier Library Abstract Archive
Abstract No. UT 356
Title: The Speed of Cooling Fronts and the Functional Form of the Dimensionless Viscosity in Accretion Disks
Author(s): Ethan T. Vishniac and J. Craig Wheeler
Keywords: black holes, accretion, accretion disks
E-Mail: Ethan T. Vishniac (to request a full copy of this paper)
Preprint: 9603159 Document source or PostScript
Release date: 04/01/96 13:55:03
Publication status: submitted to Astrophysical Journal
Comments: 22 pages, 1 figures
We examine the speed of inward traveling cooling fronts in accretion
disks. We show that their speed is determined by the rarefaction
wave that precedes them and is approximately alphaF cF
(H/r)q,
where alphaF is the dimensionless viscosity, cF is the sound speed,
r is the radial coordinate, H is the disk thickness,
and all quantities are evaluated at the cooling front. The
scaling exponent q lies in the interval [0,1], depending on the
slope of the (T,Sigma) relation in the hot state. For a Kramer's law
opacity and alpha propto (H/r)n, where n is of order unity,
we find that q sim 1/2. This supports the numerical work of
Cannizzo, Chen and Livio (1995) and their conclusion that n approx 3/2 is
necessary to reproduce the exponential decay of luminosity in black hole
X-ray binary systems. Our results are insensitive to the structure of the
disk outside of the radius where rapid cooling sets in. In particular,
the width of the rapid cooling zone is a consequence of the cooling
front speed rather than its cause. We conclude that
the exponential luminosity decay of cooling disks is probably compatible
with the wave-driven dynamo model. It is not compatible with models with
separate, constant values of alpha for the hot and cold states.