Resistive relaxation of a magnetically confined mountain on an accreting neutron star
Abstract
Three-dimensional numerical magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations are performed to investigate how a magnetically confined mountain on an accreting neutron star relaxes resistively. No evidence is found for non-ideal MHD instabilities on a short time-scale, such as the resistive ballooning mode or the tearing mode. Instead, the mountain relaxes gradually as matter is transported across magnetic surfaces on the diffusion time-scale, which evaluates to τI 105 - 108 yr (depending on the conductivity of the neutron star crust) for an accreted mass of Ma = 1.2 × 10-4 M. The magnetic dipole moment simultaneously reemerges as the screening currents dissipate over τI. For nonaxisymmetric mountains, ohmic dissipation tends to restore axisymmetry by magnetic reconnection at a filamentary neutral sheet in the equatorial plane. Ideal-MHD oscillations on the Alfv\'en time-scale, which can be excited by external influences, such as variations in the accretion torque, compress the magnetic field and hence decrease τI by one order of magnitude relative to its standard value (as computed for the static configuration). The implications of long-lived mountains for gravitational wave emission from low-mass X-ray binaries are briefly explored.