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Autores principales: Rowther, Sahl, Price, Daniel J., Pinte, Christophe, Nealon, Rebecca, Meru, Farzana, Alexander, Richard
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2024
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.10765
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author Rowther, Sahl
Price, Daniel J.
Pinte, Christophe
Nealon, Rebecca
Meru, Farzana
Alexander, Richard
author_facet Rowther, Sahl
Price, Daniel J.
Pinte, Christophe
Nealon, Rebecca
Meru, Farzana
Alexander, Richard
contents Irradiation from the central star controls the temperature structure in protoplanetary discs. Yet simulations of gravitational instability typically use models of stellar irradiation with varying complexity, or ignore it altogether, assuming heat generated by spiral shocks is balanced by cooling, leading to a self-regulated state. In this paper, we perform simulations of irradiated, gravitationally unstable protoplanetary discs using 3D hydrodynamics coupled with live Monte-Carlo radiative transfer. We find that the resulting temperature profile is approximately constant in time, since the thermal effects of the star dominate. Hence, the disc cannot regulate gravitational instabilities by adjusting the temperatures in the disc. In a 0.1 Solar mass disc, the disc instead adjusts by angular momentum transport induced by the spiral arms, leading to steadily decreasing surface density, and hence quenching of the instability. Thus, strong spiral arms caused by self-gravity would not persist for longer than ten thousand years in the absence of fresh infall, although weak spiral structures remain present over longer timescales. Using synthetic images at 1.3mm, we find that spirals formed in irradiated discs are challenging to detect. In higher mass discs, we find that fragmentation is likely because the dominant stellar irradiation overwhelms the stabilising influence of PdV work and shock heating in the spiral arms.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_10765
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Short-Lived Gravitational Instability in Isolated Irradiated Discs
Rowther, Sahl
Price, Daniel J.
Pinte, Christophe
Nealon, Rebecca
Meru, Farzana
Alexander, Richard
Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
Irradiation from the central star controls the temperature structure in protoplanetary discs. Yet simulations of gravitational instability typically use models of stellar irradiation with varying complexity, or ignore it altogether, assuming heat generated by spiral shocks is balanced by cooling, leading to a self-regulated state. In this paper, we perform simulations of irradiated, gravitationally unstable protoplanetary discs using 3D hydrodynamics coupled with live Monte-Carlo radiative transfer. We find that the resulting temperature profile is approximately constant in time, since the thermal effects of the star dominate. Hence, the disc cannot regulate gravitational instabilities by adjusting the temperatures in the disc. In a 0.1 Solar mass disc, the disc instead adjusts by angular momentum transport induced by the spiral arms, leading to steadily decreasing surface density, and hence quenching of the instability. Thus, strong spiral arms caused by self-gravity would not persist for longer than ten thousand years in the absence of fresh infall, although weak spiral structures remain present over longer timescales. Using synthetic images at 1.3mm, we find that spirals formed in irradiated discs are challenging to detect. In higher mass discs, we find that fragmentation is likely because the dominant stellar irradiation overwhelms the stabilising influence of PdV work and shock heating in the spiral arms.
title Short-Lived Gravitational Instability in Isolated Irradiated Discs
topic Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.10765