What the study found
A subgrid model of a helical large-scale dynamo with dynamical quenching was derived and implemented in general-relativistic resistive magnetohydrodynamic simulations of geometrically thin accretion disks. The model reproduced butterfly diagrams seen in earlier simulations and, in some cases, produced weak collimated polar outflows.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors say large-scale magnetic fields are relevant to processes in accretion disks such as turbulence, reconnection events, and launching outflows. They conclude that a fully dynamical subgrid dynamo could allow self-consistent amplification of large-scale magnetic fields.
What the researchers tested
The researchers built a subgrid model using previous numerical and analytical results on helical dynamos, with the viscosity parameter alpha SS as the only input parameter. They implemented it in general-relativistic resistive magnetohydrodynamical simulations of geometrically thin accretion disks and also explored a version in which alpha SS is determined by the local plasma beta, the ratio of gas pressure to magnetic pressure.
What worked and what didn't
The model reproduced butterfly diagrams from previous local and global simulations. With alpha SS = 0.02 and black hole spin a BH = 0.9375, the thin-disk model launched weak collimated polar outflows with Lorentz factor about 1.2, but no polar outflow appeared with less vigorous turbulence or with less positive a BH. With negative a BH, the field configurations were more similar to Newtonian cases, while with positive a BH the poloidal field loops became distorted and the cycle period became sporadic or disappeared.
What to keep in mind
The abstract does not describe the study's limitations in detail. The outflow result is reported only for a rather aggressive parameter choice, and the findings are limited to the simulation setups described in the abstract.
Key points
- A subgrid helical dynamo model with dynamical quenching was implemented in thin-disk general-relativistic resistive magnetohydrodynamic simulations.
- The model reproduced butterfly diagrams seen in earlier local and global simulations.
- With alpha SS = 0.02 and black hole spin a BH = 0.9375, the model launched weak collimated polar outflows with Lorentz factor about 1.2.
- No polar outflow appeared with less vigorous turbulence or with less positive black hole spin.
- Negative black hole spin produced field configurations more similar to Newtonian cases, while positive spin distorted poloidal field loops and made the cycle period sporadic or absent.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Subgrid dynamo model reproduces magnetic field cycles in thin disks
- Authors:
- Hongzhe Zhou, Yosuke Mizuno, Zhenyu Zhu
- Institutions:
- Shanghai Polytechnic University, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology, Rochester Institute of Technology
- Publication date:
- 2026-04-24
- OpenAlex record:
- View
Get the weekly research newsletter
Stay current with peer-reviewed research without reading academic papers — one filtered digest, every Friday.

