The role of magnetic fields for planetary formation
Anders Johansen

TL;DR
Magnetic fields significantly influence planet formation by driving turbulence in protoplanetary discs, affecting dust and particle dynamics, and facilitating the formation of planetesimals through gravitational clustering.
Contribution
This review highlights recent findings on how magnetorotational turbulence impacts dust transport, particle trapping, and planetesimal formation in protoplanetary discs, emphasizing the importance of magnetic effects.
Findings
Turbulent diffusion of small particles is stronger than previously thought.
Large particles are trapped in high-pressure regions caused by magnetic turbulence.
Gravitational collapse of particle overdensities leads to planetesimal formation.
Abstract
The role of magnetic fields for the formation of planets is reviewed. Protoplanetary disc turbulence driven by the magnetorotational instability has a huge influence on the early stages of planet formation. Small dust grains are transported both vertically and radially in the disc by turbulent diffusion, counteracting sedimentation to the mid-plane and transporting crystalline material from the hot inner disc to the outer parts. The conclusion from recent efforts to measure the turbulent diffusion coefficient of magnetorotational turbulence is that turbulent diffusion of small particles is much stronger than naively thought. Larger particles -- pebbles, rocks and boulders -- get trapped in long-lived high pressure regions that arise spontaneously at large scales in the turbulent flow. These gas high pressures, in geostrophic balance with a sub-Keplerian/super-Keplerian zonal flow…
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