Trapping of giant-planet cores - I. Vortex aided trapping at the outer dead zone edge
Zs. Regaly, Zs. Sandor, P. Csomos, S. Ataiee

TL;DR
This study uses 2D hydrodynamic simulations to explore how vortices at the outer edge of a dead zone in protoplanetary discs can temporarily trap giant-planet cores, influencing planet formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that vortex formation due to Rossby wave instability is crucial for effective core trapping, highlighting the importance of viscosity transition sharpness.
Findings
Vortex formation enables temporary trapping of planetary cores.
Trapping duration is inversely related to viscosity transition width.
Stellar torque significantly affects planetary migration paths.
Abstract
In this paper the migration of a 10 Earth-mass planetary core is investigated at the outer boundary of the dead zone of a protoplanetary disc by means of 2D hydrodynamic simulations done with the graphics processor unit version of the FARGO code. In the dead zone, the effective viscosity is greatly reduced due to the disc self-shielding against stellar UV radiation, X-rays from the stellar magnetosphere and interstellar cosmic rays. As a consequence, mass accumulation occurs near the outer dead zone edge, which is assumed to trap planetary cores enhancing the efficiency of the core-accretion scenario to form giant planets. Contrary to the perfect trapping of planetary cores in 1D models, our 2D numerical simulations show that the trapping effect is greatly dependent on the width of the region where viscosity reduction is taking place. Planet trapping happens exclusively if the viscosity…
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