Protoplanetary migration in non-isothermal discs with turbulence driven by stochastic forcing
A. Pierens, C. Baruteau, F. Hersant

TL;DR
This study investigates how turbulence modeled as stochastic forcing affects the migration of low-mass planets in non-isothermal protoplanetary discs, showing turbulence can preserve corotation torque and alter migration rates.
Contribution
It demonstrates that turbulence can maintain the corotation torque in non-isothermal discs, aligning turbulent disc behavior with laminar models under certain conditions.
Findings
Turbulence can keep the entropy-related corotation torque unsaturated.
The torque in turbulent discs matches laminar models with appropriate diffusion coefficients.
Turbulence can slow down or reverse Type I migration in non-isothermal discs.
Abstract
Low-mass objects embedded in isothermal protoplanetary discs are known to suffer rapid inward Type I migration. In non-isothermal discs, recent work has shown that a decreasing radial profile of the disc entropy can lead to a strong positive corotation torque which can significantly slow down or reverse Type I migration in laminar viscous disc models. It is not clear however how this picture changes in turbulent disc models. The aim of this study is to examine the impact of turbulence on the torque experienced by a low-mass planet embedded in a non-isothermal protoplanetary disc. We particularly focus on the role of turbulence on the corotation torque whose amplitude depends on the efficiency of diffusion processes in the planet's horseshoe region. We performed 2D numerical simulations using a grid-based hydrodynamical code in which turbulence is modelled as stochastic forcing. In order…
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