Thermal Waves in Irradiated Protoplanetary Disks
Sei-ichiro Watanabe, D. N. C. Lin

TL;DR
This paper investigates thermal wave phenomena in irradiated protoplanetary disks, revealing spontaneous, quasi-periodic thermal waves that impact disk stability, structure, and observable spectral energy distributions, especially in transitional disks.
Contribution
It introduces a direct integration method for optical depths to model thermal evolution, showing spontaneous thermal waves and their stabilization by viscous dissipation, advancing understanding of disk dynamics.
Findings
Thermal waves are spontaneously excited in outer disks.
Viscous dissipation stabilizes thermal instabilities.
Thermal waves cause episodic spectral changes in disks.
Abstract
Protoplanetary disks are mainly heated by radiation from the central star. Since the incident stellar flux at any radius is sensitive to the disk structure near that location, an unstable feedback may be present. Previous investigations show that the disk would be stable to finite-amplitude temperature perturbations if the vertical height of optical surface is everywhere directly proportional to the gas scale height and if the intercepted fraction of stellar radiation is determined from the local grazing angle. We show that these assumptions may not be generally applicable. Instead, we calculate the quasi-static thermal evolution of irradiated disks by directly integrating the global optical depths to determine the optical surface and the total emitting area-filling factor of surface dust. We show that, in disks with modest mass accretion rates, thermal waves are spontaneously and…
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