Context. Ionisation controls the chemistry, thermal balance, and magnetic coupling in protoplanetary discs. However, standard ionisation vectors such as stellar UV, X-rays, Galactic cosmic rays might not be efficient enough, as UV/X-rays are attenuated rapidly with depth, while Galactic cosmic rays are modulated. Turbulence-induced magnetic reconnection in disc atmospheric layers offers a physically motivated, in situ source of energetic particles (EPs) that has never been considered. Aims. We quantify the ionisation and heating produced by EPs accelerated by turbulent reconnection, identify where they dominate over X-rays and Galactic cosmic rays, and determine energetic thresholds for their relevance. We provide scalable diagnostics tied to the local energy budget. Methods. We adopt a Fermi-like acceleration model with parameters linked to a turbulent reconnection geometry trigger by the magneto-rotational instability, yielding a steady-state energy distribution of the EP forming a power-law of index p = 2.5. We propagate electrons and protons through the disc and compute primary and secondary ionisation and associated heating on a fiducial T Tauri disc model background. The non-thermal normalisation is set by the fraction of local viscous accretion energy dissipation channelled to EPs, parametrised by κ. Results. For κ ≳ 0.4%, EPs ionisation overpass standard sources such as X-rays and Galactic cosmic rays in the disc atmosphere and intermediate/deep layers out to radii of a few tens of astronomical units. Even at κ ~ 0.025%, EPs contribute at the few-percent level, thus are chemically and dynamically relevant. The EP-induced heating complements UV/X-ray heating in the atmosphere and persists deeper. These results identify EPs accelerated by turbulence-induced magnetic reconnection as a rather robust, disc-internal ionisation channel that should be included in thermo-chemical and dynamical models of protoplanetary discs.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
V. Brunn
F. Pucci
A. Marcowith
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Brunn et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a1351ded1d949a99abeb52 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202558004/pdf
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: