Gas and dust structures in protoplanetary disks hosting multiple planets
P. Pinilla, M. de Juan Ovelar, S. Ataiee, M. Benisty, T. Birnstiel, E., F. van Dishoeck, M. Min

TL;DR
This paper investigates how multiple planets influence gas and dust structures in transition disks, using simulations to connect observed features with planetary properties and disk parameters.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how multiple planets affect dust trapping and distribution, offering constraints on planet mass and disk viscosity based on simulated observational signatures.
Findings
High viscosity disks require more massive planets for dust trapping.
Micron-sized dust can be replenished in the cavity if small grains are not fully filtered.
Gas distribution shows low-amplitude asymmetries due to eccentricity, not vortices.
Abstract
Transition disks have dust-depleted inner regions and may represent an intermediate step of an on-going disk dispersal process, where planet formation is probably in progress. Recent millimetre observations of transition disks reveal radially and azimuthally asymmetric structures, where micron- and millimetre-sized dust particles may not spatially coexist. These properties can be the result of particle trapping and grain growth in pressure bumps originating from the disk interaction with a planetary companion. The multiple features observed in some transition disks, such as SR 21, suggest the presence of more than one planet. We study the gas and dust distributions of a disk hosting two massive planets as function of different disk and dust parameters. Observational signatures, such as the spectral energy distribution, sub-millimetre, and polarised images are simulated for the various…
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