The discovery of refractory grains amongst the particles collected from Comet
81P/Wild 2 by the Stardust spacecraft (Brownlee et al. 2006) provides the
ground truth for large-scale transport of materials formed in high temperature
regions close to the protosun outward to the comet-forming regions of the solar
nebula. While accretion disk models driven by a generic turbulent viscosity
have been invoked as a means to explain such large-scale transport, the
detailed physics behind such an ``alpha'' viscosity remains unclear. We present
here an alternative physical mechanism for large-scale transport in the solar
nebula: gravitational torques associated with the transient spiral arms in a
marginally gravitationally unstable disk, of the type that appears to be
necessary to form gas giant planets. Three dimensional models are presented of
the time evolution of self-gravitating disks, including radiative transfer and
detailed equations of state, showing that small dust grains will be transported
upstream and downstream (with respect to the mean inward flow of gas and dust
being accreted by the central protostar) inside the disk on time scales of less
than 1000 yr inside 10 AU. These models furthermore show that any initial
spatial heterogeneities present (e.g., in short-lived isotopes such as 26Al)
will be homogenized by disk mixing down to a level of ~10%, preserving the use
of short-lived isotopes as accurate nebular chronometers, while simultaneously
allowing for the spread of stable oxygen isotope ratios. This finite level of
nebular spatial heterogeneity appears to be related to the coarse mixing
achieved by spiral arms, with radial widths of order 1 AU, over time scales of
~1000 yrs.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures. Earth & Planetary Science Letters, accepte