Dust-trapping Rossby vortices in protoplanetary disks
H. Meheut, Z. Meliani, P. Varniere, and W. Benz

TL;DR
This study uses 3D simulations to show how Rossby vortices in protoplanetary disks can efficiently concentrate dust, potentially leading to planetesimal formation, with vertical motions significantly affecting dust sedimentation.
Contribution
First 3D simulation demonstrating dust concentration in Rossby vortices including vertical velocity effects and dust back-reaction in stratified disks.
Findings
Large dust grains concentrate rapidly in vortices.
Dust-to-gas ratio reaches unity within a few rotations.
Vertical velocities cause dust lifting and enhanced upper layer concentrations.
Abstract
One of the most challenging steps in planet formation theory is the one leading to the formation of planetesimals of kilometre size. A promising scenario involves the existence of vortices able to concentrate a large amount of dust and grains in their centres. Up to now this scenario has been studied mostly in 2D razor thin disks. A 3D study including, simultaneously, the formation and resulting dust concentration of the vortices with vertical settling, was still missing. The Rossby wave instability self-consistently forms 3D vortices, which have the unique quality of presenting a large scale vertical velocity in their centre. Here we aim to study how this newly discovered effect can alter the dynamic evolution of the dust. We perform global 3D simulations of the RWI in a radially and vertically stratified disk using the code MPI-AMRVAC. After the growth phase of the instability, the…
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