Tidal Truncation of Circumplanetary Discs
Rebecca G. Martin, Stephen H. Lubow

TL;DR
This paper investigates the properties and structure of circumplanetary discs, focusing on tidal truncation effects, disc thickness, and implications for satellite formation, using analytical models and simulations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how tidal forces truncate circumplanetary discs and explores the impact of disc thickness and turbulence on satellite formation zones.
Findings
Discs are truncated near 0.4 r_H due to tidal forces.
Thick discs (H/r > 0.2) are common during T Tauri stages.
Disc structure is smooth near satellite formation regions.
Abstract
We analyse some properties of circumplanetary discs. Flow through such discs may provide most of the mass to gas giant planets, and such discs are likely sites for the formation of regular satellites. We model these discs as accretion discs subject to the tidal forces of the central star. The tidal torques from the star remove the disc angular momentum near the disc outer edge and permit the accreting disc gas to lose angular momentum at the rate appropriate for steady accretion. Circumplanetary discs are truncated near the radius where periodic ballistic orbits cross, where tidal forces on the disc are strong. This radius occurs at approximately 0.4 r_H for the planet Hill radius r_H. During the T Tauri stage of disc accretion, the disc is fairly thick with aspect ratio H/r > 0.2 and the disc edge tapering occurs over a radial scale ~ H ~ 0.1 r_H. For a circular or slightly eccentric…
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