Litcius/Paper detail

Pileups and Migration Rates for Planets in Low-mass Disks

Adam M. Dempsey, Wing-Kit Lee, Yoram Lithwick

2020The Astrophysical Journal37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract We investigate how planets interact with viscous accretion disks, in the limit that the disk is sufficiently low mass that the planet migrates more slowly than the disk material. In that case, the disk’s surface density profile is determined by the disk being in viscous steady state (VSS) while overflowing the planet’s orbit. We compute the VSS profiles with 2D hydrodynamical simulations, and show that disk material piles up behind the planet, with the planet effectively acting as a leaky dam. Previous 2D hydrodynamical simulations missed the pileup effect because of incorrect boundary conditions, while previous 1D models greatly overpredicted the pileup due to the neglect of nonlocal deposition. Our simulations quantify the magnitude of the pileup for a variety of planet masses and disk viscosities. We also calculate theoretically the magnitude of the pileup for moderately deep gaps, showing good agreement with simulations. For very deep gaps, current theory is inadequate, and we show why and what must be understood better. The pileup is important for two reasons. First, it is observable in directly imaged protoplanetary disks, and hence can be used to diagnose the mass of a planet that causes it or the viscosity within the disk. Second, it determines the planet’s migration rate. Our simulations determine a new Type-II migration rate (valid for low-mass disks), and show how it connects continuously with the well-verified Type-I rate.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsPlanetAstrophysicsPlanetary migrationAccretion (finance)ObservableProtoplanetary diskMagnitude (astronomy)Boundary (topology)Accretion discGiant planetSteady state (chemistry)Planetary systemViscosityPlanetary massLimit (mathematics)Boundary value problemTerrestrial planetLow MassMechanicsAstronomyCurrent (fluid)PhotoevaporationMagnetorotational instabilityKinetic energyComputational physicsAstrophysics and Star Formation StudiesAstronomy and Astrophysical ResearchEducational Leadership and Practices