The dynamical role of the circumplanetary disc in planetary migration
A. Crida, C. Baruteau, W. Kley, F. Masset

TL;DR
This study investigates how different methods of accounting for the circumplanetary disc in numerical simulations affect planetary migration rates, emphasizing the importance of accurately modeling gas within the Hill sphere.
Contribution
The paper compares various approaches to include circumplanetary disc effects in simulations, highlighting their impact on migration and providing practical recommendations for modeling.
Findings
Adding CPD mass accelerates migration.
Excluding more than 0.6 Hill radius can suppress migration.
Full gas selfgravity cannot be fully approximated by simpler methods.
Abstract
Numerical simulations of planets embedded in protoplanetary gaseous discs are a precious tool for studying the planetary migration ; however, some approximations have to be made. Most often, the selfgravity of the gas is neglected. In that case, it is not clear in the literature how the material inside the Roche lobe of the planet should be taken into account. Here, we want to address this issue by studying the influence of various methods so far used by different authors on the migration rate. We performed high-resolution numerical simulations of giant planets embedded in discs. We compared the migration rates with and without gas selfgravity, testing various ways of taking the circum-planetary disc (CPD) into account. Different methods lead to significantly different migration rates. Adding the mass of the CPD to the perturbing mass of the planet accelerates the migration. Excluding…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
