Abstract

Our aim is to study the thermal and dynamical evolution of protoplanetary disks in global simulations, including the physics of radiation transfer and magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence caused by the magneto-rotational instability. We develop a radiative transfer method based on the flux-limited diffusion approximation that includes frequency dependent irradiation by the central star. This hybrid scheme is implemented in the PLUTO code. The focus of our implementation is on the performance of the radiative transfer method. Using an optimized Jacobi preconditioned BiCGSTAB solver, the radiative module is three times faster than the MHD step for the disk setup we consider. We obtain weak scaling efficiencies of 70% up to 1024 cores. We present the first global 3D radiation MHD simulations of a stratified protoplanetary disk. The disk model parameters are chosen to approximate those of the system AS 209 in the star-forming region Ophiuchus. Starting the simulation from a disk in radiative and hydrostatic equilibrium, the magnetorotational instability quickly causes MHD turbulence and heating in the disk. For the disk parameters we use, turbulent dissipation heats the disk midplane and raises the temperature by about 15% compared to passive disk models. A roughly flat vertical temperature profile establishes in the disk optically thick region close to the midplane. We reproduce the vertical temperature profile with a viscous disk models for which the stress tensor vertical profile is flat in the bulk of the disk and vanishes in the disk corona. The present paper demonstrates for the first time that global radiation MHD simulations of turbulent protoplanetary disks are feasible with current computational facilities. This opens up the windows to a wide range of studies of the dynamics of protoplanetary disks inner parts, for which there are significant observational constraints.

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