Modeling gravitational instabilities in self-gravitating protoplanetary disks with adaptive mesh refinement techniques
Tim Lichtenberg, Dominik R. G. Schleicher

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the use of adaptive mesh refinement techniques in 3D hydrodynamic simulations to model gravitational instabilities in protoplanetary disks, establishing resolution criteria for accurate planet formation modeling.
Contribution
It introduces a global disk setup with AMR for simulating giant planet formation via gravitational instabilities and derives minimum resolution requirements for resolving fragmentation.
Findings
At least 100 cells are needed to resolve fragmentation zones.
AMR techniques effectively model clump formation in protoplanetary disks.
Resolution criteria are established for different disk sizes.
Abstract
The astonishing diversity in the observed planetary population requires theoretical efforts and advances in planet formation theories. Numerical approaches provide a method to tackle the weaknesses of current planet formation models and are an important tool to close gaps in poorly constrained areas. We present a global disk setup to model the first stages of giant planet formation via gravitational instabilities (GI) in 3D with the block-structured adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) hydrodynamics code ENZO. With this setup, we explore the impact of AMR techniques on the fragmentation and clumping due to large-scale instabilities using different AMR configurations. Additionally, we seek to derive general resolution criteria for global simulations of self-gravitating disks of variable extent. We run a grid of simulations with varying AMR settings, including runs with a static grid for…
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