The interplay between radiation pressure and the photoelectric instability in optically thin disks of gas and dust
Alexander J.W. Richert, Wladimir Lyra, and Marc Kuchner

TL;DR
This study models the photoelectric instability in optically thin gas and dust disks, incorporating stellar radiation pressure, revealing complex structures like rings and arcs that depend on system parameters.
Contribution
First numerical models of the photoelectric instability including stellar radiation pressure, exploring how it influences disk morphology across different gas densities.
Findings
High gas surface densities produce rings, arcs, and clumps.
Low gas densities lead to vortices and spiral arms in gas, weakly affecting dust.
Viscosity smooths disk structures, constraining gas viscosity.
Abstract
Previous theoretical works have shown that in optically thin disks, dust grains are photoelectrically stripped of electrons by starlight, heating nearby gas and possibly creating a dust clumping instability, the photoelectric instability (PeI), that significantly alters global disk structure. In the current work, we use the Pencil Code to perform the first numerical models of the PeI that include stellar radiation pressure on dust grains in order to explore the parameter regime in which the instability operates. In models with gas surface densities greater than , we see a variety of dust structures, including sharp concentric rings and non-axisymmetric arcs and clumps that represent dust surface density enhancements of factors of depending on the run parameters. The gas distributions show various structures as well, including…
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