Grain opacity and the bulk composition of extrasolar planets. II. An analytical model for the grain opacity in protoplanetary atmospheres
C. Mordasini

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytical model for grain opacity in protoplanetary atmospheres, revealing how microphysical processes influence opacity and impact giant planet formation.
Contribution
The study introduces a simple analytical model for grain opacity based on microphysical timescales, improving understanding of its radial structure and effects on planet formation.
Findings
Differential settling is the dominant grain growth process.
Grain opacity is much lower than in the interstellar medium.
Higher dust input does not significantly increase grain opacity.
Abstract
Context. We investigate the grain opacity k_gr in the atmosphere of protoplanets. This is important for the planetary mass-radius relation since k_gr affects the H/He envelope mass of low-mass planets and the critical core mass of giant planets. Aims. The goal of this study is to derive an analytical model for k_gr. Methods. Our model is based on the comparison of the timescales of microphysical processes like grain settling in the Stokes and Epstein regime, growth by Brownian motion coagulation and differential settling, grain evaporation, and grain advection due to envelope contraction. With these timescales we derive the grain size, abundance, and opacity. Results. We find that the main growth process is differential settling. In this regime, k_gr has a simple functional form and is given as 27 Q/8 H rho in the Epstein regime and as 2 Q/H rho for Stokes drag. Grain dynamics lead to a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
