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Main Authors: Castrejon, Areli, Min, Michiel, Kamp, Inga, Jørgensen, Uffe Gråe
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.22737
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author Castrejon, Areli
Min, Michiel
Kamp, Inga
Jørgensen, Uffe Gråe
author_facet Castrejon, Areli
Min, Michiel
Kamp, Inga
Jørgensen, Uffe Gråe
contents Context. To date, more than 5000 exoplanets have been discovered. The large majority of these planets have a mass between 1 and 17 {M_\oplus}, making them so-called super-Earths and mini-Neptunes. The exact formation process for this abundant planet population has not yet been fully constrained. Aims. Recent studies on the formation of these planets make various assumptions with regard to the disk. The primary mass budget, held in pebbles, is either assumed to have a constant size or is parametrized as a flux. Simplifications of the temperature structure, in the form of a static power law, do not consider the temperature evolution and high magnitudes of heating in the inner part of the disk. In this study, we aim to investigate the effect these simplifications of temperature and pebble sizes have on the pebble densities and resulting planet populations. Methods. To constrain the timescales needed to form super-Earths, we developed a model for exploring a large parameter space. We included the effect of two different temperature prescriptions on a viscously accreting and spreading disk. We formed a pebble reservoir utilizing a simplified conversion timescale with a time- and radially dependent Stokes number for the dust. We then tracked the temporal evolution of the surface densities of gas, dust, and pebbles. Pebbles were allowed to drift and be accreted onto a growing protoplanet. As a planet grows, it exerts a torque on the disk, carving out a gap and affecting the pebble drift, before halting the growth of the planet.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_22737
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The effect of dynamic temperatures on pebble dynamics and planet formation
Castrejon, Areli
Min, Michiel
Kamp, Inga
Jørgensen, Uffe Gråe
Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
Context. To date, more than 5000 exoplanets have been discovered. The large majority of these planets have a mass between 1 and 17 {M_\oplus}, making them so-called super-Earths and mini-Neptunes. The exact formation process for this abundant planet population has not yet been fully constrained. Aims. Recent studies on the formation of these planets make various assumptions with regard to the disk. The primary mass budget, held in pebbles, is either assumed to have a constant size or is parametrized as a flux. Simplifications of the temperature structure, in the form of a static power law, do not consider the temperature evolution and high magnitudes of heating in the inner part of the disk. In this study, we aim to investigate the effect these simplifications of temperature and pebble sizes have on the pebble densities and resulting planet populations. Methods. To constrain the timescales needed to form super-Earths, we developed a model for exploring a large parameter space. We included the effect of two different temperature prescriptions on a viscously accreting and spreading disk. We formed a pebble reservoir utilizing a simplified conversion timescale with a time- and radially dependent Stokes number for the dust. We then tracked the temporal evolution of the surface densities of gas, dust, and pebbles. Pebbles were allowed to drift and be accreted onto a growing protoplanet. As a planet grows, it exerts a torque on the disk, carving out a gap and affecting the pebble drift, before halting the growth of the planet.
title The effect of dynamic temperatures on pebble dynamics and planet formation
topic Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.22737