Probing the turbulent mixing strength in protoplanetary disks across the stellar mass range: no significant variations
Gijs D. Mulders, Carsten Dominik

TL;DR
This study models protoplanetary disks around various star types to investigate turbulent mixing strength, finding it remains consistent across stellar masses, suggesting similar turbulence-driven mixing processes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that turbulent mixing strength in disks does not significantly vary with stellar mass when modeled with consistent parameters.
Findings
Turbulent mixing strength is similar across different stellar types.
Disks around lower mass stars are more settled at the same temperature.
Results are consistent with low alpha values or altered grain size distributions.
Abstract
Dust settling and grain growth are the first steps in the planet-formation process in protoplanetary disks. These disks are observed around stars with different spectral types, and there are indications that the disks around lower mass stars are significantly flatter, which could indicate that they settle and evolve faster, or in a different way. We aim to test this assumption by modeling the median spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of three samples of protoplanetary disks: around Herbig stars, T Tauri stars and brown dwarfs. We focus on the turbulent mixing strength to avoid a strong observational bias from disk and stellar properties that depend on stellar mass. We generated SEDs with the radiative transfer code MCMax, using a hydrostatic disk structure and settling the dust in a self-consistent way with the alpha-prescription to probe the turbulent mixing strength. We are…
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