102 research outputs found
Influence of the water content in protoplanetary discs on planet migration and formation
The temperature and density profiles of protoplanetary discs depend crucially
on the mass fraction of micrometre-sized dust grains and on their chemical
composition. A larger abundance of micrometre-sized grains leads to an overall
heating of the disc, so that the water ice line moves further away from the
star. An increase in the water fraction inside the disc, maintaining a fixed
dust abundance, increases the temperature in the icy regions of the disc and
lowers the temperature in the inner regions. Discs with a larger silicate
fraction have the opposite effect. Here we explore the consequence of the dust
composition and abundance for the formation and migration of planets. We find
that discs with low water content can only sustain outwards migration for
planets up to 4 Earth masses, while outwards migration in discs with a larger
water content persists up to 8 Earth masses in the late stages of the disc
evolution. Icy planetary cores that do not reach run-away gas accretion can
thus migrate to orbits close to the host star if the water abundance is low.
Our results imply that hot and warm super-Earths found in exoplanet surveys
could have formed beyond the ice line and thus contain a significant fraction
in water. These water-rich super-Earths should orbit primarily around stars
with a low oxygen abundance, where a low oxygen abundance is caused by either a
low water-to-silicate ratio or by overall low metallicity.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, accepted by A&
Planet population synthesis driven by pebble accretion in cluster environments
The evolution of protoplanetary discs embedded in stellar clusters depends on
the age and the stellar density in which they are embedded. Stellar clusters of
young age and high stellar surface density destroy protoplanetary discs by
external photoevaporation and stellar encounters. Here we consider the effect
of background heating from newly formed stellar clusters on the structure of
protoplanetary discs and how it affects the formation of planets in these
discs. Our planet formation model is build on the core accretion scenario
including pebble accretion. We synthesize planet populations that we compare to
observations. The giant planets in our simulations migrate over large distances
due to the fast type-II migration regime induced by a high disc viscosity
(). Cold Jupiters (r>1 AU) originate preferably from
the outer disc, while hot Jupiters (r<0.1 AU) preferably form in the inner
disc. We find that the formation of gas giants via pebble accretion is in
agreement with the metallicity correlation, meaning that more gas giants are
formed at larger metallicity. However, our synthetic population of isolated
stars host a significant amount of giant planets even at low metallicity, in
contradiction to observations where giant planets are preferably found around
high metallicity stars, indicating that pebble accretion is very efficient in
the standard pebble accretion framework. On the other hand, discs around stars
embedded in cluster environments hardly form any giant planets at low
metallicity in agreement with observations, where these changes originate from
the increased temperature in the outer parts of the disc, which prolongs the
core accretion time-scale of the planet. We therefore conclude that the outer
disc structure and the planet's formation location determines the giant planet
occurrence rate and the formation efficiency of cold and hot Jupiters.Comment: 12 pages, accepted for publication in MNRA
Planet migration in three-dimensional radiative discs
The migration of growing protoplanets depends on the thermodynamics of the
ambient disc. Standard modelling, using locally isothermal discs, indicate in
the low planet mass regime an inward (type-I) migration. Taking into account
non-isothermal effects, recent studies have shown that the direction of the
type-I migration can change from inward to outward. In this paper we extend
previous two-dimensional studies, and investigate the planet-disc interaction
in viscous, radiative discs using fully three-dimensional radiation
hydrodynamical simulations of protoplanetary accretion discs with embedded
planets, for a range of planetary masses.
We use an explicit three-dimensional (3D) hydrodynamical code NIRVANA that
includes full tensor viscosity. We have added implicit radiation transport in
the flux-limited diffusion approximation, and to speed up the simulations
significantly we have newly adapted and implemented the FARGO-algorithm in a 3D
context.
First, we present results of test simulations that demonstrate the accuracy
of the newly implemented FARGO-method in 3D. For a planet mass of 20 M_earth we
then show that the inclusion of radiative effects yields a torque reversal also
in full 3D. For the same opacity law used the effect is even stronger in 3D
than in the corresponding 2D simulations, due to a slightly thinner disc.
Finally, we demonstrate the extent of the torque reversal by calculating a
sequence of planet masses. Through full 3D simulations of embedded planets in
viscous, radiative discs we confirm that the migration can be directed outwards
up to planet masses of about 33 M_earth. Hence, the effect may help to resolve
the problem of too rapid inward migration of planets during their type-I phase.Comment: 16 pages, Astronomy&Astrophysics, in pres
The growth of planets by pebble accretion in evolving protoplanetary discs
The formation of planets depends on the underlying protoplanetary disc
structure, which influences both the accretion and migration rates of embedded
planets. The disc itself evolves on time-scales of several Myr during which
both temperature and density profiles change as matter accretes onto the
central star. Here we use a detailed model of an evolving disc to determine the
growth of planets by pebble accretion and their migration through the disc.
Cores that reach their pebble isolation mass accrete gas to finally form giant
planets with extensive gas envelopes, while planets that do not reach pebble
isolation mass are stranded as ice giants and ice planets containing only minor
amounts of gas in their envelopes. Unlike earlier population synthesis models,
our model works without any artificial reductions in migration speed and for
protoplanetary discs with gas and dust column densities similar to those
inferred from observations. We find that in our nominal disc model the
emergence of planetary embryos preferably occurs after approximately 2 Myr in
order to not exclusively form gas giants, but also ice giants and smaller
planets. The high pebble accretion rates ensure that critical core masses for
gas accretion can be reached at all orbital distances. Gas giant planets
nevertheless experience significant reduction in semi-major axes by migration.
Considering instead planetesimal accretion for planetary growth, we show that
formation time-scales are too long to compete with the migration time-scales
and the dissipation time of the protoplanetary disc. Altogether, we find that
pebble accretion overcomes many of the challenges in the formation of ice and
gas giants in evolving protoplanetary discs.Comment: Accepted by A&A, now with language editin
Influence of grain growth on the thermal structure of protoplanetary discs
The thermal structure of a protoplanetary disc is regulated by the opacity
that dust grains provide. However, previous works have often considered
simplified prescriptions for the dust opacity in hydrodynamical disc
simulations, e.g. by considering only a single particle size. In the present
work we perform 2D hydrodynamical simulations of protoplanetary discs where the
opacity is self-consistently calculated for the dust population, taking into
account the particle size, composition and abundance. We first compare
simulations using single grain sizes to two different multi-grain size
distributions at different levels of turbulence strengths, parameterized
through the -viscosity, and different gas surface densities. Assuming a
single dust size leads to inaccurate calculations of the thermal structure of
discs, because the grain size dominating the opacity increases with orbital
radius. Overall the two grain size distributions, one limited by fragmentation
only and the other determined from a more complete fragmentation-coagulation
equilibrium, give similar results for the thermal structure. We find that both
grain size distributions give less steep opacity gradients that result in less
steep aspect ratio gradients, in comparison to discs with only micrometer sized
dust. Moreover, in the discs with a grain size distribution, the innermost
outward migration region is removed and planets embedded is such discs
experience lower migration rates. We also investigate the dependency of the
water iceline position on the alpha-viscosity, the initial gas surface density
at 1 AU and the dust-to-gas ratio and find independently of the distribution used. The
inclusion of the feedback loop between grain growth, opacities and disc
thermodynamics allows for more self-consistent simulations of accretion discs
and planet formation.Comment: Accepted by A&A, 27 pages, 19 figure
The structure of protoplanetary discs around evolving young stars
The formation of planets with gaseous envelopes takes place in protoplanetary
accretion discs on time-scales of several millions of years. Small dust
particles stick to each other to form pebbles, pebbles concentrate in the
turbulent flow to form planetesimals and planetary embryos and grow to planets,
which undergo substantial radial migration. All these processes are influenced
by the underlying structure of the protoplanetary disc, specifically the
profiles of temperature, gas scale height and density. The commonly used disc
structure of the Minimum Mass Solar Nebular (MMSN) is a simple power law in all
these quantities. However, protoplanetary disc models with both viscous and
stellar heating show several bumps and dips in temperature, scale height and
density caused by transitions in opacity, which are missing in the MMSN model.
These play an important role in the formation of planets, as they can act as
sweet spots for the formation of planetesimals via the streaming instability
and affect the direction and magnitude of type-I-migration. We present 2D
simulations of accretion discs that feature radiative cooling, viscous and
stellar heating, and are linked to the observed evolutionary stages of
protoplanetary discs and their host stars. These models allow us to identify
preferred planetesimal and planet formation regions in the protoplanetary disc
as a function of the disc's metallicity, accretion rate and lifetime. We derive
simple fitting formulae that feature all structural characteristics of
protoplanetary discs during the evolution of several Myr. These fits are
straightforward to apply for modelling any growth stage of planets where
detailed knowledge of the underlying disc structure is required.Comment: Accepted by A&A, v3 corrected small typo in the fitting formula
Stellar abundance of binary stars: their role in determining the formation location of super-Earths and ice giants
Binary stars form from the same parent molecular cloud and thus have the same
chemical composition. Forming planets take building material (solids) away from
the surrounding protoplanetary disc. Assuming that the disc's accretion onto
the star is the main process that clears the disc, the atmosphere of the star
will show abundance reductions caused by the material accreted by the forming
planet(s). If planets are only forming around one star of a binary system, the
planet formation process can result in abundance differences in wide binary
stars, if their natal protoplanetary discs do not interact during planet
formation. Abundance differences in the atmospheres of wide binaries hosting
giant planets have already been observed and linked to the formation location
of giant planets. Here, we model how much building material is taken away for
super-Earth planets that form inside/outside of the water ice line as well as
ice giants forming inside/outside of the CO ice line. Our model predicts a
significant abundance difference [X/H] in the stellar atmospheres of
the planet-hosting binary component. Our model predicts that super-Earths that
form inside the water ice line () will result in an
[Fe/H]/[O/H] abundance difference in the their host star that
is a factor of 2 larger than for super-Earths formed outside the water ice line
() in the water rich parts of the disc. Additionally, our model
shows that the [Fe/H]/[C/H] abundance difference in the host
star is at least a factor of 3 larger for ice giants formed at
compared to ice giants formed far out in the protoplanetary disc (). Future observations of wide binary star systems hosting super-Earths and
ice giants could therefore help to constrain the migration pathway of these
planets and thus constrain planet formation theories.Comment: accepted by MNRA
Enriching inner discs and giant planets with heavy elements
Giant exoplanets seem to have on average a much larger heavy element content
than the solar system giants. Past attempts to explain these heavy element
contents include collisions between planets, accretion of volatile rich gas and
accretion of gas enriched in micro-metre sized solids. However, these different
theories individually could not explain the heavy element content of giants and
the volatile to refractory ratios in atmospheres of giant planets at the same
time. Here we combine the approaches of gas accretion enhanced with vapor and
small micro-meter sized dust grains. As pebbles drift inwards, the volatile
component evaporates and enriches the disc, while the smaller silicate core of
the pebble continues to move inwards. The smaller silicate pebbles drift
slower, leading to a pile-up of material interior to the water ice line,
increasing the dust-to-gas ratio interior to the ice line. Under the assumption
that these small dust grains follow the motion of the gas, gas accreting giants
accrete large fractions of small solids in addition to the volatile vapor. The
effectiveness of the solid enrichment requires a large disc radius to maintain
the pebble flux for a long time and a large viscosity that reduces the size and
inward drift of the small dust grains. However, this process depends crucially
on the debated size difference of the pebbles interior and exterior of the
water ice line. On the other hand, the volatile component released by the
inward drifting pebbles can lead to a large enrichment with heavy element
vapor, independently of a size difference of pebbles interior and exterior to
the water ice line. Our model stresses the importance of the disc's radius and
viscosity on the enrichment of dust and vapor. Consequently we show how our
model could explain the heavy element content of the majority of giant planets
by using combined estimates of dust and vapor enrichment.Comment: Accepted by A&A, 10 pages, 9 figure
Highly inclined and eccentric massive planets I: Planet-disc interactions
In the Solar System, planets have a small inclination with respect to the
equatorial plane of the Sun, but there is evidence that in extrasolar systems
the inclination can be very high. This spin-orbit misalignment is unexpected,
as planets form in a protoplanetary disc supposedly aligned with the stellar
spin. Planet-planet interactions are supposed to lead to a mutual inclination,
but the effects of the protoplanetary disc are still unknown. We investigate
therefore planet-disc interactions for planets above 1M_Jup. We check the
influence of the inclination i, eccentricity e, and mass M_p of the planet. We
perform 3D numerical simulations of protoplanetary discs with embedded
high-mass planets. We provide damping formulae for i and e as a function of i,
e, and M_p that fit the numerical data. For highly inclined massive planets,
the gap opening is reduced, and the damping of i occurs on time-scales of the
order of 10^-4 deg/yr M_disc/(0.01 M_star) with the damping of e on a smaller
time-scale. While the inclination of low planetary masses (<5M_Jup) is always
damped, large planetary masses with large i can undergo a Kozai-cycle with the
disc. These Kozai-cycles are damped in time. Eccentricity is generally damped,
except for very massive planets (M_p = 5M_Jup) where eccentricity can increase
for low inclinations. The dynamics tends to a final state: planets end up in
midplane and can then, over time, increase their eccentricity as a result of
interactions with the disc. The interactions with the disc lead to damping of i
and e after a scattering event of high-mass planets. If i is sufficiently
reduced, the eccentricity can be pumped up because of interactions with the
disc. If the planet is scattered to high inclination, it can undergo a
Kozai-cycle with the disc that makes it hard to predict the exact movement of
the planet and its orbital parameters at the dispersal of the disc.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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