Dynamical friction on hot bodies in opaque, gaseous media
Fr\'ed\'eric S. Masset, David A. Velasco Romero

TL;DR
This paper investigates how heat radiation affects gravitational forces on bodies moving in gaseous media, revealing a new heating force that can oppose standard dynamical friction and influence planetary embryo dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel heating force component in dynamical friction theory, derived through linear perturbation analysis, accounting for heat radiation effects in gaseous environments.
Findings
Heating force opposes standard dynamical friction at low Mach numbers.
Heating force magnitude depends on luminosity, mass, and thermal diffusivity.
Implications for planetary embryo eccentricities and inclinations in protoplanetary disks.
Abstract
We consider the gravitational force exerted on a point-like perturber of mass travelling within a uniform gaseous, opaque medium at constant velocity . The perturber irradiates the surrounding gas with luminosity . The diffusion of the heat released is modelled with a uniform thermal diffusivity . Using linear perturbation theory, we show that the force exerted by the perturbed gas on the perturber differs from the force without radiation (or standard dynamical friction). Hot, underdense gas trails the mass, which gives rise to a new force component, the heating force, with direction , thus opposed to the standard dynamical friction. In the limit of low Mach numbers, the heating force has expression , being the sound speed and the ratio of specific heats. In the limit of large Mach numbers,…
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