162 research outputs found
Time evolution of a viscous protoplanetary disk with a free geometry: toward a more self-consistent picture
Observations of protoplanetary disks show that some characteristics seem
recurrent, even in star formation regions that are physically distant such as
surface mass density profiles varying as , or aspect ratios about 0.03
to 0.23. Accretion rates are also recurrently found around for disks already evolved (Isella et al.,
2009, Andrews et al., 2009, 2010). Several models have been developed in order
to recover these properties. However, most of them usually simplify the disk
geometry if not its mid-plane temperature. This has major consequences for
modeling the disk evolution over million years and consequently planet
migration. In the present paper, we develop a viscous evolution hydrodynamical
numerical code that determines simultaneously the disk photosphere geometry and
the mid-plane temperature. We then compare our results of long-term simulations
with similar simulations of disks with a constrained geometry along the Chiang
& Goldreich (1997) prescription (dlnH/dlnr = 9/7). We find that the constrained
geometry models provide a good approximation of the disk surface density
evolution. However, they differ significantly regarding the temperature time
evolution. In addition, we find that shadowed regions naturally appear at the
transition between viscously dominated and radiation dominated regions that
falls in the region of planetary formation. We show that (photosphere
height to pressure scale height ratio) cannot be considered as a constant,
consistently with Watanabe et al. (2008). Comparisons with observations show
that all disk naturally evolve toward a shallow surface density disk (). The mass flux across the disk stabilizes in about 1 million
year typically.Comment: 43 pages, 16 figures Accepted in Astrophysical Journa
Dynamical Evolution of the Debris Disk after a Satellite Catastrophic Disruption around Saturn
The hypothesis of a recent origin of Saturn's rings and its mid-sized moons
is actively debated. It was suggested that a proto-Rhea and a proto-Dione might
have collided recently, giving birth to the modern system of mid-sized moons.
It is also suggested that the rapid viscous spreading of the debris may have
implanted mass inside Saturn's Roche limit, giving birth to the modern Saturn's
ring system. However, this scenario has been only investigated in very
simplified way for the moment. This paper investigates it in detail to assess
its plausibility by using -body simulations and analytical arguments. When
the debris disk is dominated by its largest remnant, -body simulations show
that the system quickly re-accrete into a single satellite without significant
spreading. On the other hand, if the disk is composed of small particles,
analytical arguments suggest that the disk experiences dynamical evolutions in
three steps. The disk starts significantly excited after the impact and
collisional damping dominates over the viscous spreading. After the system
flattens, the system can become gravitationally unstable when particles are
smaller than 100 m. However, the particles grow faster than spreading.
Then, the system becomes gravitationally stable again and accretion continues
at a slower pace, but spreading is inhibited. Therefore, the debris is expected
to re-accrete into several large bodies. In conclusion, our results show that
such a scenario may not form the today's ring system. In contrast, our results
suggest that today's mid-sized moons are likely re-accreted from such a
catastrophic event.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A
LIDT-DD: A new self-consistent debris disc model including radiation pressure and coupling collisional and dynamical evolution
In most current debris disc models, the dynamical and the collisional
evolutions are studied separately, with N-body and statistical codes,
respectively, because of stringent computational constraints. We present here
LIDT-DD, the first code able to mix both approaches in a fully self-consistent
way. Our aim is for it to be generic enough so as to be applied to any
astrophysical cases where we expect dynamics and collisions to be deeply
interlocked with one another: planets in discs, violent massive breakups,
destabilized planetesimal belts, exozodiacal discs, etc. The code takes its
basic architecture from the LIDT3D algorithm developed by Charnoz et al.(2012)
for protoplanetary discs, but has been strongly modified and updated in order
to handle the very constraining specificities of debris discs physics:
high-velocity fragmenting collisions, radiation-pressure affected orbits,
absence of gas, etc. In LIDT-DD, grains of a given size at a given location in
a disc are grouped into "super-particles", whose orbits are evolved with an
N-body code and whose mutual collisions are individually tracked and treated
using a particle-in-a-box prescription. To cope with the wide range of possible
dynamics, tracers are sorted and regrouped into dynamical families depending on
their orbits. The code retrieves the classical features known for debris discs,
such as the particle size distributions in unperturbed discs, the outer radial
density profiles (slope in -1.5) outside narrow collisionally active rings, and
the depletion of small grains in "dynamically cold" discs. The potential of the
new code is illustrated with the test case of the violent breakup of a massive
planetesimal within a debris disc. The main potential future applications of
the code are planet/disc interactions, and more generally any configurations
where dynamics and collisions are expected to be intricately connected.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 20 pages, 17 figures. Abstract
shortened for astro-p
On the Impact Origin of Phobos and Deimos I: Thermodynamic and Physical Aspects
Phobos and Deimos are the two small moons of Mars. Recent works have shown
that they can accrete within an impact-generated disk. However, the detailed
structure and initial thermodynamic properties of the disk are poorly
understood. In this paper, we perform high-resolution SPH simulations of the
Martian moon-forming giant impact that can also form the Borealis basin. This
giant impact heats up the disk material (around K in temperature)
with an entropy increase of J K kg. Thus, the disk
material should be mostly molten, though a tiny fraction of disk material () would even experience vaporization. Typically, a piece of molten disk
material is estimated to be meter sized due to the fragmentation regulated by
their shear velocity and surface tension during the impact process. The disk
materials initially have highly eccentric orbits () and
successive collisions between meter-sized fragments at high impact velocity
( km s) can grind them down to m-sized particles.
On the other hand, a tiny amount of vaporized disk material condenses into
m-sized grains. Thus, the building blocks of the Martian moons
are expected to be a mixture of these different sized particles from
meter-sized down to m-sized particles and m-sized
grains. Our simulations also suggest that the building blocks of Phobos and
Deimos contain both impactor and Martian materials (at least 35%), most of
which come from the Martian mantle (50-150 km in depth; at least 50%). Our
results will give useful information for planning a future sample return
mission to Martian moons, such as JAXA's MMX (Martian Moons eXploration)
mission.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Long-term & large-scale viscous evolution of dense planetary rings
We investigate the long-term and large-scale viscous evolution of dense
planetary rings using a simple 1D numerical code. We use a physically realistic
viscosity model derived from N-body simulations (Daisaka et al., 2001), and
dependent on the disk's local properties (surface mass density, particle size,
distance to the planet). Particularly, we include the effects of gravitational
instabilities (wakes) that importantly enhance the disk's viscosity. We show
that common estimates of the disk's spreading time-scales with constant
viscosity significantly underestimate the rings' lifetime. With a realistic
viscosity model, an initially narrow ring undergoes two successive evolutionary
stages: (1) a transient rapid spreading when the disk is self-gravitating, with
the formation of a density peak inward and an outer region marginally
gravitationally stable, and with an emptying time-scale proportional to 1/M_0^2
(where M_0 is the disk's initial mass) (2) an asymptotic regime where the
spreading rate continuously slows down as larger parts of the disk become
not-self-gravitating due to the decrease of the surface density, until the disk
becomes completely not-self-gravitating. At this point its evolution
dramatically slows down, with an emptying time-scale proportional to 1/M_0,
which significantly increases the disk's lifetime compared to the case with
constant viscosity. We show also that the disk's width scales like t^{1/4} with
the realistic viscosity model, while it scales like t^{1/2} in the case of
constant viscosity, resulting in much larger evolutionary time-scales in our
model. We find however that the present shape of Saturn's rings looks like a
100 million-years old disk in our simulations. Concerning Jupiter's, Uranus'
and Neptune's rings that are faint today, it is not likely that they were much
more massive in the past and lost most of their mass due to viscous spreading
alone.Comment: 18 pages, 18 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in Icaru
Saturn's Exploration Beyond Cassini-Huygens
For its beautiful rings, active atmosphere and mysterious magnetic field,
Saturn is a fascinating planet. It also holds some of the keys to understanding
the formation of our Solar System and the evolution of giant planets in
general. While the exploration by the Cassini-Huygens mission has led to great
advances in our understanding of the planet and its moons, it has left us with
puzzling questions: What is the bulk composition of the planet? Does it have a
helium core? Is it enriched in noble gases like Jupiter? What powers and
controls its gigantic storms? We have learned that we can measure an outer
magnetic field that is filtered from its non-axisymmetric components, but what
is Saturn's inner magnetic field? What are the rings made of and when were they
formed? These questions are crucial in several ways: a detailed comparison of
the compositions of Jupiter and Saturn is necessary to understand processes at
work during the formation of these two planets and of the Solar System. This
calls for the continued exploration of the second largest planet in our Solar
System, with a variety of means including remote observations and space
missions. Measurements of gravity and magnetic fields very close to the
planet's cloud tops would be extremely valuable. Very high spatial resolution
images of the rings would provide details on their structure and the material
that form them. Last but not least, one or several probes sent into the
atmosphere of the planet would provide the critical measurements that would
allow a detailed comparison with the same measurements at Jupiter. [abridged
abstract
A method for coupling dynamical and collisional evolution of dust in circumstellar disks: the effect of a dead zone
Dust is a major component of protoplanetary and debris disks as it is the
main observable signature of planetary formation. However, since dust dynamics
is size-dependent (because of gas-drag or radiation pressure) any attempt to
understand the full dynamical evolution of circumstellar dusty-disks that
neglect the coupling of collisional evolution with dynamical evolution is
thwarted because of the feedback between these two processes. Here, a new
hybrid lagrangian/eulerian code is presented that overcomes some of these
difficulties. The particles representing "dust-clouds" are tracked individually
in a lagrangian way. This system is then mapped on an eulerian spatial grid,
inside the cells of which the local collisional evolutions are computed.
Finally, the system is remapped back in a collection of discrete lagrangian
particles keeping constant their number. An application example on dust growth
in a turbulent protoplanetary disk at 1 AU is presented. First the growth of
dust is considered in the absence of a dead-zone and the vertical distribution
of dust is self-consistently computed. It is found that the mass is rapidly
dominated by particles about a fraction of millimeter in size. Then the same
case with an embedded dead-zone is investigated and It is found that
coagulation is much more efficient and produces, in a short time scale,
1cm-10cm dust pebbles that dominate the mass. These pebbles may then be
accumulated into embryos sized objects inside large-scale turbulent structures
as shown recently (see e.g. Johansen et al., 2007).Comment: 29 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
- …