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Rossby-wave instability in viscous discs

The Rossby wave instability (RWI), which depends on the density bumps and extremum in the vortensities in the differentially rotating discs, plays an important role in the evolution of the protoplanetary discs. In this article, we investigate the effect of viscosity on the non-axisymmetric RWI in the self-graviting accretion discs. For this purpose, we add the viscosity to the work of Lovelace and Hohlfeld (2013). Consideration of viscosity complicates the problem so that we use the numerical method to investigate the stable and unstable modes. We consider three ranges of viscosities: high viscosity in the ranges $0.1\leq α\leq 0.4$, moderate viscosity in the ranges $0.01\leq α< 0.1$, and low viscosity in the ranges $α< 0.01$. The results show that the occurrence of the RWI is related to the value of viscosity so that the effect of high viscosity is important, while the low viscosity is negligible. These results may be applied for the study of the RWI role in planet formation and angular momentum transport for different kinds of the protoplanetary discs with different viscosities.

preprint2014arXivOpen access

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