Vortex formation in protoplanetary discs induced by the vertical shear instability
Samuel Richard, Richard P. Nelson, Orkan M. Umurhan

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic simulations to explore vortex formation in protoplanetary discs caused by the vertical shear instability, revealing how thermal and entropy profiles influence vortex size, strength, and longevity.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how the VSI induces vortices with varying properties depending on thermal relaxation and entropy gradients, highlighting their transient nature.
Findings
Vortices form via VSI in discs with specific thermal profiles.
Short thermal relaxation times produce small, short-lived vortices.
Longer entropy-dependent vortices can persist for hundreds of orbits.
Abstract
We present the results of 2D and 3D hydrodynamic simulations of idealized protoplanetary discs that examine the formation and evolution of vortices by the vertical shear instability (VSI). In agreement with recent work, we find that discs with radially decreasing temperature profiles and short thermal relaxation time-scales, are subject to the axisymmetric VSI. In three dimensions, the resulting velocity perturbations give rise to quasi-axisymmetric potential vorticity perturbations that break-up into discrete vortices, in a manner that is reminiscent of the Rossby wave instability. Discs with very short thermal evolution time-scales (i.e. {\tau}<0.1 local orbit periods) develop strong vorticity perturbations that roll up into vortices that have small aspect ratios ({\chi}<2) and short lifetimes (~ a few orbits). Longer thermal time-scales give rise to vortices with larger aspect ratios…
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