288 research outputs found
On the corotation torque in a radiatively inefficient disk
We consider the angular momentum exchange at the corotation resonance between
a two-dimensional gaseous disk and a uniformly rotating external potential,
assuming that the disk flow is adiabatic. We first consider the linear case for
an isolated resonance, for which we give an expression of the corotation torque
that involves the pressure perturbation, and which reduces to the usual
dependence on the vortensity gradient in the limit of a cold disk. Although
this expression requires the solution of the hydrodynamic equations, it
provides some insight into the dynamics of the corotation region. In the
general case, we find an additional dependence on the entropy gradient at
corotation. This dependence is associated to the advection of entropy
perturbations. These are not associated to pressure perturbations. They remain
confined to the corotation region, where they yield a singular contribution to
the corotation torque. In a second part, we check our torque expression by
means of customized two-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations. In a third
part, we contemplate the case of a planet embedded in a Keplerian disk, assumed
to be adiabatic. We find an excess of corotation torque that scales with the
entropy gradient, and we check that the contribution of the entropy
perturbation to the torque is in agreement with the expression obtained from
the linear analysis. We finally discuss some implications of the corotation
torque expression for the migration of low mass planets in the regions of
protoplanetary disks where the flow is radiatively inefficient on the timescale
of the horseshoe U-turns.Comment: 36 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Inertial waves in a differentially rotating spherical shell
We investigate the properties of small-amplitude inertial waves propagating
in a differentially rotating incompressible fluid contained in a spherical
shell. For cylindrical and shellular rotation profiles and in the inviscid
limit, inertial waves obey a second-order partial differential equation of
mixed type. Two kinds of inertial modes therefore exist, depending on whether
the hyperbolic domain where characteristics propagate covers the whole shell or
not. The occurrence of these two kinds of inertial modes is examined, and we
show that the range of frequencies at which inertial waves may propagate is
broader than with solid-body rotation. Using high-resolution calculations based
on a spectral method, we show that, as with solid-body rotation, singular modes
with thin shear layers following short-period attractors still exist with
differential rotation. They exist even in the case of a full sphere. In the
limit of vanishing viscosities, the width of the shear layers seems to weakly
depend on the global background shear, showing a scaling in E^{1/3} with the
Ekman number E, as in the solid-body rotation case. There also exist modes with
thin detached layers of width scaling with E^{1/2} as Ekman boundary layers.
The behavior of inertial waves with a corotation resonance within the shell is
also considered. For cylindrical rotation, waves get dramatically absorbed at
corotation. In contrast, for shellular rotation, waves may cross a critical
layer without visible absorption, and such modes can be unstable for small
enough Ekman numbers.Comment: 31 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Journal of Fluid
Mechanic
Disk-planets interactions and the diversity of period ratios in Kepler's multi-planetary systems
The Kepler mission is dramatically increasing the number of planets known in
multi-planetary systems. Many adjacent planets have orbital period ratios near
resonant values, with a tendency to be larger than required for exact
first-order mean-motion resonances. This intriguing feature has been shown to
be a natural outcome of orbital circularization of resonant planetary pairs due
to star-planet tidal interactions. However, this feature holds in
multi-planetary systems with periods longer than ten days, for which tidal
circularization is unlikely to provide efficient divergent evolution of the
planets orbits. Gravitational interactions between planets and their parent
protoplanetary disk may instead provide efficient divergent evolution. For a
planet pair embedded in a disk, we show that interactions between a planet and
the wake of its companion can reverse convergent migration, and significantly
increase the period ratio from a near-resonant value. Divergent evolution due
to wake-planet interactions is particularly efficient when at least one of the
planets opens a partial gap around its orbit. This mechanism could help account
for the diversity of period ratios in Kepler's multiple systems comprising
super-Earth to sub-jovian planets with periods greater than about ten days.
Diversity is also expected for planet pairs massive enough to merge their gap.
The efficiency of wake-planet interactions is then much reduced, but convergent
migration may stall with a variety of period ratios depending on the density
structure in the common gap. This is illustrated for the Kepler-46 system, for
which we reproduce the period ratio of Kepler-46b and c.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Planet--planet scattering in circumstellar gas disks
Hydrodynamical simulations of two giant planets embedded in a gaseous disk
have shown that in case of a smooth convergent migration they end up trapped
into a mean motion resonance. These findings have led to the conviction that
the onset of dynamical instability causing close encounters between the planets
can occur only after the dissipation of the gas when the eccentricity damping
is over. We show that a system of three giant planets may undergo planet-planet
scattering when the gaseous disk, with density values comparable to that of the
Minimum Mass Solar Nebula, is still interacting with the planets. The
hydrodynamical code FARGO--2D--1D is used to model the evolution ofthe disk and
planets, modified to properly handle close encounters between the massive
bodies. Our simulations predict a variety of different outcomes of the
scattering phase which includes orbital exchange, planet merging and scattering
of a planet in a hyperbolic orbit. This implies thatthe final fate of a
multiplanet system under the action of the disk torques is not necessarily a
packed resonant configuration.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters, in pres
Tidal inertial waves in the differentially rotating convective envelopes of low-mass stars - I. Free oscillation modes
Star-planet tidal interactions may result in the excitation of inertial waves
in the convective region of stars. In low-mass stars, their dissipation plays a
prominent role in the long-term orbital evolution of short-period planets.
Turbulent convection can sustain differential rotation in their envelope, with
an equatorial acceleration (as in the Sun) or deceleration, which can modify
the waves' propagation properties. We explore in this first paper the general
propagation properties of free linear inertial waves in a differentially
rotating homogeneous fluid inside a spherical shell. We assume that the angular
velocity background flow depends on the latitudinal coordinate only, close to
what is expected in the external convective envelope of low-mass stars. We use
i) an analytical approach in the inviscid case to get the dispersion relation,
from which we compute the characteristic trajectories along which energy
propagates. This allows us to study the existence of attractor cycles and infer
the different families of inertial modes; ii) high-resolution numerical
calculations based on a spectral method for the viscous problem. We find that
modes that propagate in the whole shell (D modes) behave the same way as with
solid-body rotation. However, another family of inertial modes exists (DT
modes), which can propagate only in a restricted part of the convective zone.
Our study shows that they are less common than D modes and that the
characteristic rays and shear layers often focus towards a wedge - or
point-like attractor. More importantly, we find that for non-axisymmetric
oscillation modes, shear layers may cross a corotation resonance with a local
accumulation of kinetic energy. Their damping rate scales very differently from
what we obtain for standard D modes and we show an example where it is
independent of viscosity (Ekman number) in the astrophysical regime in which it
is small.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in A&
A torque formula for non-isothermal Type I planetary migration - II. Effects of diffusion
We study the effects of diffusion on the non-linear corotation torque, or
horseshoe drag, in the two-dimensional limit, focusing on low-mass planets for
which the width of the horseshoe region is much smaller than the scale height
of the disc. In the absence of diffusion, the non-linear corotation torque
saturates, leaving only the Lindblad torque. Diffusion of heat and momentum can
act to sustain the corotation torque. In the limit of very strong diffusion,
the linear corotation torque is recovered. For the case of thermal diffusion,
this limit corresponds to having a locally isothermal equation of state. We
present some simple models that are able to capture the dependence of the
torque on diffusive processes to within 20% of the numerical simulations.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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