49 research outputs found

    Turbulence in particle laden midplane layers of planet forming disks

    Full text link
    We examine the settled particle layers of planet forming disks in which the streaming instability (SI) is thought to be either weak or inactive. A suite of low-to-moderate resolution three-dimensional simulations in a 0.2H0.2H sized box, where HH is the pressure scale height, are performed using PENCIL for two Stokes numbers, \St=0.04=0.04 and 0.20.2, at 1\% disk metallicity. We find a complex of Ekman-layer jet-flows emerge subject to three co-acting linearly growing processes: (1) the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (KHI), (2) the planet-forming disk analog of the baroclinic Symmetric Instability (SymI), and (3) a later-time weakly acting secondary transition process, possibly a manifestation of the SI, producing a radially propagating pattern state. For \St=0.2=0.2, KHI is dominant and manifests as off-midplane axisymmetric rolls, while for \St=0.04=0.04 the axisymmetric SymI mainly drives turbulence. SymI is analytically developed in a model disk flow, predicting that it becomes strongly active when the Richardson number (Ri) of the particle-gas midplane layer transitions below 1, exhibiting growth rates \le\sqrt{2/\Ri - 2}\cdot\Omega, where Ξ©\Omega is local disk rotation rate. For fairly general situations absent external sources of turbulence it is conjectured that the SI, when and if initiated, emerges out of a turbulent state primarily driven and shaped by at least SymI and/or KHI. We also find that turbulence produced in 2563256^3 resolution simulations are not statistically converged and that corresponding 5123512^3 simulations may be converged for \St=0.2=0.2. Furthermore, we report that our numerical simulations significantly dissipate turbulent kinetic energy on scales less than 6-8 grid points.Comment: 55 pages, 27 figures, accepted for publication in Ap

    Formation of the First Planetesimals via the Streaming Instability in Globally Turbulent Protoplanetary Disks?

    Full text link
    Using self-consistent models of turbulent particle growth in an evolving protoplanetary nebula of solar composition we find that recently proposed local metallicity and Stokes number criteria necessary for the streaming instability to generate gravitationally bound particle overdensities are generally not approached anywhere in the disk during the first million years, an epoch in which meteoritic and observational evidence strongly suggests that the formation of the first planetesimals and perhaps giant planet core accretion is already occurring.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, 1 appendix. Accepted to Ap

    Retention of CO Ice and Gas Within 486958 Arrokoth

    Full text link
    Kuiper Belt Objects (KBOs) represent some of the most ancient remnants of our solar system, having evaded significant thermal or evolutionary processing. This makes them important targets for exploration as they offer a unique opportunity to scrutinize materials that are remnants of the epoch of planet formation. Moreover, with recent and upcoming observations of KBOs, there is a growing interest in understanding the extent to which these objects can preserve their most primitive, hypervolatile ices. Here, we present a theoretical framework that revisits this issue for small, cold classical KBOs like Arrokoth. Our analytical approach is consistent with prior studies but assumes an extreme cold end-member thermophysical regime for Arrokoth, enabling us to capture the essential physics without computationally expensive simulations. Under reasonable assumptions for interior temperatures, thermal conductivities, and permeabilities, we demonstrate that Arrokoth can retain its original CO stock for Gyrs if it was assembled long after the decay of radionuclides. The sublimation of CO ice generates an effective CO `atmosphere' within Arrokoth's porous matrix, which remains in near vapor-pressure equilibrium with the ice layer just below, thereby limiting CO loss. According to our findings, Arrokoth expels no more than β‰ˆ1022\approx 10^{22} particles sβˆ’1^{-1}, in agreement with upper limits inferred from \textit{New Horizons}' 2019 flyby observations. While our framework challenges recent predictions, it can serve as a benchmark for existing numerical models and be applied to future KBO observations from next-generation telescopes.Comment: Under consideration for publication in ICARUS special conference issue: ACM 1
    corecore