Possible planet-forming regions on submillimetre images
Zs. Regaly, A. Juhasz, Zs. Sandor, C. P. Dullemond

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that large-scale vortices caused by Rossby wave instability in transition discs can explain observed asymmetries in submillimetre images, indicating potential planet-forming regions far from the star.
Contribution
It models vortex formation and evolution in transition discs and links these structures to observed submillimetre asymmetries, suggesting active planet formation zones.
Findings
Large-scale vortices form within 5x10^4 years and can survive for the disc's lifetime.
Simulated submillimetre images match observed asymmetries in three transition discs.
Vortices can trap large dust grains, indicating potential planet formation sites.
Abstract
Submillimetre images of transition discs are expected to reflect the distribution of the optically thin dust. Former observation of three transition discs LkHa330, SR21N, and HD1353444B at submillimetre wavelengths revealed images which cannot be modelled by a simple axisymmetric disc. We show that a large-scale anticyclonic vortex that develops where the viscosity has a large gradient (e.g., at the edge of the disc dead zone), might be accountable for these large-scale asymmetries. We modelled the long-term evolution of vortices being triggered by the Rossby wave instability. We found that a horseshoe-shaped (azimuthal wavenumber m=1) large-scale vortex forms by coalescing of smaller vortices within 5x10^4 yr, and can survive on the disc life-time (~5x10^6 yr), depending on the magnitude of global viscosity and the thickness of the viscosity gradient. The two-dimensional grid-based…
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