Magnetorotational dynamo can generate large-scale vertical magnetic fields in 3D GRMHD simulations of accreting black holes

Abstract

Jetted astrophysical phenomena with black hole (BH) engines, including binary mergers, jetted tidal disruption events, and X-ray binaries, require a large-scale vertical magnetic field for efficient jet formation. However, a dynamo mechanism that could generate these crucial large-scale magnetic fields has not been identified and characterized. We have employed 3D global general relativistic magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) simulations of accretion disks to quantify, for the first time, a dynamo mechanism that generates large-scale magnetic fields. This dynamo mechanism primarily arises from the nonlinear evolution of the magnetorotational instability (MRI). In this mechanism, large non-axisymmetric MRI-amplified shearing wave modes, mediated by the axisymmetric azimuthal magnetic field, generate and sustain the large-scale vertical magnetic field through their nonlinear interactions. We identify the advection of magnetic loops as a crucial feature, transporting the large-scale vertical magnetic field from the outer regions to the inner regions of the accretion disk. This leads to a larger characteristic size of the, now advected, magnetic field when compared to the local disk height. We characterize the complete dynamo mechanism with two timescales: one for the local magnetic field generation, t g, and one for the large-scale scale advection, t adv. Whereas the dynamo we describe is nonlinear, we explore the potential of linear mean field models to replicate its core features. Our findings indicate that traditional α-dynamo models, often computed in stratified shearing box simulations, are inadequate and that the effective large-scale dynamics is better described by the shear current effects or stochastic α-dynamos.

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