The Spiral Wave Instability Induced by a Giant Planet: I. Particle Stirring in the Inner Regions of Protoplanetary Disks
Jaehan Bae (U. of Michigan), Richard P. Nelson (QMUL), Lee Hartmann, (U. of Michigan)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how spiral density waves caused by a giant planet induce turbulence and particle mixing in protoplanetary disks, affecting planet formation processes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the spiral wave instability (SWI) driven by a Jupiter-mass planet causes turbulence and vertical mixing of particles, impacting planet formation models.
Findings
Spiral waves become unstable and generate turbulence.
Vertical diffusion rates are sufficient to mix centimeter-sized particles.
Implications for timing of planet formation and solid particle dispersal.
Abstract
We have recently shown that spiral density waves propagating in accretion disks can undergo a parametric instability by resonantly coupling with and transferring energy into pairs of inertial waves (or inertial-gravity waves when buoyancy is important). In this paper, we perform inviscid three-dimensional global hydrodynamic simulations to examine the growth and consequence of this instability operating on the spiral waves driven by a Jupiter-mass planet in a protoplanetary disk. We find that the spiral waves are destabilized via the spiral wave instability (SWI), generating hydrodynamic turbulence and sustained radially-alternating vertical flows that appear to be associated with long wavelength inertial modes. In the interval , where denotes the semi-major axis of the planetary orbit (assumed to be 5~au), the estimated vertical diffusion rate…
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