219 research outputs found
Migration of Earth-size planets in 3D radiative discs
In this paper, we address the migration of small mass planets in 3D radiative
disks. Indeed, migration of small planets is known to be too fast inwards in
locally isothermal conditions. However, thermal effects could reverse its
direction, potentially saving planets in the inner, optically thick parts of
the protoplanetary disc. This effect has been seen for masses larger than 5
Earth masses, but the minimum mass for this to happen has never been probed
numerically, although it is of crucial importance for planet formation
scenarios. We have extended the hydro-dynamical code FARGO to 3D, with thermal
diffusion. With this code, we perform simulations of embedded planets down to 2
Earth masses. For a set of discs parameters for which outward migration has
been shown in the range of Earth masses, we find that the transition
to inward migration occurs for masses in the range Earth masses. The
transition appears to be due to an unexpected phenomenon: the formation of an
asymmetric cold and dense finger of gas driven by circulation and libration
streamlines. We recover this phenomenon in 2D simulations where we control the
cooling effects of the gas through a simple modeling of the energy equation.Comment: 17 pages, 20 figures, accepted. MNRAS, 201
Cavity opening by a giant planet in a protoplanetary disc and effects on planetary migration
We study the effect of a Jovian planet on the gas distribution of a protoplanetary disc, using a new numerical scheme that allows us to take into consideration the global evolution of the disc, down to an arbitrarily small inner physical radius. We find that Jovian planets do not open cavities in the inner part of the disc (i.e. interior to their orbits) unless (a) the inner physical edge of the disc is close to the planet's location or (b) the planet is much more massive than the disc. In all other cases the planet simply opens a gap in the gas density distribution, whose global profile is essentially unchanged relative to the one that it would have if the planet were absent. We recognize, though, that the dust distribution can be significantly different from the gas distribution and that dust cavities might be opened in some situations, even if the gas is still present in the inner part of the disc. Concerning the migration of the planet, we find that classical Type-II migration (with speed proportional to the viscosity of the disc) occurs only if the gap opened by the planet is deep and clean. If there is still a significant amount of gas in the gap, the migration of the planet is generally slower than the theoretical Type-II migration rate. In some situations, migration can be stopped or even reversed. We develop a simple model that reproduces satisfactorily the migration rate observed in the simulations, for a wide range of disc viscosities and planet masses and locations relative to the inner disc edge. Our results are relevant for extra-solar planetary systems, as they explain (a) why some hot Jupiters did not migrate all the way down to their parent stars and (b) why the outermost of a pair of resonant planets is typically the most massive one
Meridional circulation of gas into gaps opened by giant planets in three-dimensional low-viscosity disks
We examine the gas circulation near a gap opened by a giant planet in a
protoplanetary disk. We show with high resolution 3D simulations that the gas
flows into the gap at high altitude over the mid-plane, at a rate dependent on
viscosity. We explain this observation with a simple conceptual model. From
this model we derive an estimate of the amount of gas flowing into a gap opened
by a planet with Hill radius comparable to the scale-height of a layered disk
(i. e. a disk with viscous upper layer and inviscid midplane). Our estimate
agrees with modern MRI simulations(Gressel et al., 2013). We conclude that gap
opening in a layered disk can not slow down significantly the runaway gas
accretion of Saturn to Jupiter-mass planets.Comment: in press as a Note in Icaru
Simulating planet migration in globally evolving disks
Numerical simulations of planet-disk interactions are usually performed with
hydro-codes that -- because they consider only an annulus of the disk, over a
2D grid -- can not take into account the global evolution of the disk. However,
the latter governs planetary migration of type II, so that the accuracy of the
planetary evolution can be questioned.
To develop an algorithm that models the local planet-disk interactions
together with the global viscous evolution of the disk, we surround the usual
2D grid with a 1D grid ranging over the real extension of the disk. The 1D and
2D grids are coupled at their common boundaries via ghost rings, paying
particular attention to the fluxes at the interface, especially the flux of
angular momentum carried by waves. The computation is done in the frame
centered on the center of mass to ensure angular momentum conservation.
The global evolution of the disk and the local planet-disk interactions are
both well described and the feedback of one on the other can be studied with
this algorithm, for a negligible additional computing cost with respect to
usual algorithms.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The discovery and dynamical evolution of an object at the outer edge of Saturn's A ring
This work was supported by the Science and Technology Facilities Council (Grant No. ST/F007566/1) and we are grateful to them for financial assistance. C.D.M. is also grateful to the Leverhulme Trust for the award of a Research Fellowshippublisher PDF not permitted, withdraw
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