Stellar irradiated discs and implications on migration of embedded planets III: viscosity transitions
Bertram Bitsch, Alessandro Morbidelli, Elena Lega, Kathrine Kretke,, Aur\'elien Crida

TL;DR
This study explores how viscosity transitions in stellar irradiated discs influence planetary migration and planetesimal formation, revealing that steep viscosity jumps can create traps for small planets and facilitate planetesimal formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that viscosity transitions can halt inward planetary migration and promote planetesimal formation, with implications for planet formation theories.
Findings
Viscosity jumps create density and pressure bumps that stop inward migration of planets >0.5 Earth masses.
Steep viscosity transitions are necessary to form pressure bumps capable of trapping smaller planets.
Viscosity transitions enhance conditions for planetesimal formation via streaming instability.
Abstract
The migration strength and direction of embedded low-mass planets depends on the disc structure. In discs with an efficient radiative transport, the migration can be directed outwards for planets with more than 3-5 Earth masses. This is due to the entropy driven corotation torque, a process that extends the lifetimes of growing planetary embryos. We investigate the influence on the disc structure caused by a jump in the alpha parameter of the viscosity to model a dead-zone structure in the disc. We focus on M-dot discs, which have a constant net mass flux. Using the resulting disc structure, we investigate the consequences for the formation of planetesimals and determine the regions of outward migration for proto-planets. We performed numerical hydrosimulations of M-dot discs in the r-z-plane. We used the explicit/implicit hydrodynamical code FARGOCA that includes a full tensor…
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