Magnetic Coupling in the Disks Around Young Gas Giant Planets
N. J. Turner, M. H. Lee, T. Sano

TL;DR
This study investigates the conditions under which circumplanetary disks around young gas giants become turbulent due to magnetic effects, supporting both minimum-mass and gas-starved models of proto-Jovian disks.
Contribution
It models ionization and conductivity in proto-Jupiter's disk, identifying conditions for magneto-rotational instability-driven turbulence and supporting two main disk formation theories.
Findings
Turbulence is possible with X-ray ionization and specific surface density ranges.
Minimum-mass models have low conductivity preventing magnetic angular momentum transfer.
Gas-starved models have active surface layers and a decoupled interior 'dead zone'.
Abstract
We examine the conditions under which the disks of gas and dust orbiting young gas giant planets are sufficiently conducting to experience turbulence driven by the magneto-rotational instability. By modeling the ionization and conductivity in the disk around proto-Jupiter, we find that turbulence is possible if the X-rays emitted near the Sun reach the planet's vicinity and either (1) the gas surface densities are in the range of the minimum-mass models constructed by augmenting Jupiter's satellites to Solar composition, while dust is depleted from the disk atmosphere, or (2) the surface densities are much less, and in the range of gas-starved models fed with material from the Solar nebula, but not so low that ambipolar diffusion decouples the neutral gas from the plasma. The results lend support to both minimum-mass and gas-starved models of the protojovian disk: (1) The dusty…
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