The Impact of Dust Evolution and Photoevaporation on Disk Dispersal
Uma Gorti, David Hollenbach, Cornelis Dullemond

TL;DR
This study models how dust evolution and photoevaporation influence protoplanetary disk dispersal, affecting gas and dust dynamics, with implications for planet formation and disk composition.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive 1-D multi-fluid model incorporating dust evolution and photoevaporation, revealing their combined effects on disk dispersal and composition.
Findings
Dust evolution marginally decreases disk lifetime.
Photoevaporation reduces gas/dust ratio in planet-forming regions.
Remaining solids after dispersal are comparable to our solar system's solids inventory.
Abstract
Protoplanetary disks are dispersed by viscous evolution and photoevaporation in a few million years; in the interim small, sub-micron sized dust grains must grow and form planets. The time-varying abundance of small grains in an evolving disk directly affects gas heating by far-ultraviolet photons, while dust evolution affects photoevaporation by changing the disk opacity and resulting penetration of FUV photons in the disk. Photoevaporative flows, in turn, selectively carry small dust grains leaving the larger particles---which decouple from the gas---behind in the disk. We study these effects by investigating the evolution of a disk subject to viscosity, photoevaporation by EUV, FUV and X-rays, dust evolution, and radial drift using a 1-D multi-fluid approach (gas + different dust grain sizes) to solve for the evolving surface density distributions. The 1-D evolution is augmented by…
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