We investigate the migration of a low-mass (≲10M⊕) planet
near the inner edge of a protoplanetary disc using two-dimensional viscous
hydrodynamics simulations. We employ an inner boundary condition representing
the truncation of the disc at the stellar corotation radius. As described by
Tsang (2011), wave reflection at the inner disc boundary modifies the Type I
migration torque on the planet, allowing migration to be halted before the
planet reaches the inner edge of the disc. For low-viscosity discs (α≲10−3), planets may be trapped with semi-major axes as large as
3−5 times the inner disc radius. In general, planets are trapped closer to
the inner edge as either the planet mass or the disc viscosity parameter
α increases, and farther from the inner edge as the disc thickness is
increased. This planet trapping mechanism may impact the formation and
migration history of close-in compact multiplanet systems.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA