Effects of global gas flows on type I migration
Masahiro Ogihara, Eiichiro Kokubo, Takeru K. Suzuki, Alessandro, Morbidelli, Aur\'elien Crida

TL;DR
This paper investigates how global gas flows driven by disk winds influence type I planetary migration, revealing that rapid gas flows can cause outward migration and affect the formation of close-in super-Earth planets.
Contribution
It introduces a simplified model to study wind-driven gas flows' impact on type I migration and demonstrates their role in creating outward migration regions in protoplanetary disks.
Findings
Fast gas flows desaturate corotation torque.
Outward migration regions extend to super-Earth masses.
No planets fall into the star in the simulations.
Abstract
Magnetically-driven disk winds would alter the surface density slope of gas in the inner region of a protoplanetary disk . This in turn affects planet formation. Recently, the effect of disk wind torque has been considered with the suggestion that it would carve out the surface density of the disk from inside and would induce global gas flows (wind-driven accretion). We aim to investigate effects of global gas flows on type I migration and also examine planet formation. A simplified approach was taken to address this issue, and N-body simulations with isolation-mass planets were also performed. In previous studies, the effect of gas flow induced by turbulence-driven accretion has been taken into account for its desaturation effect of the corotation torque. If more rapid gas flows (e.g., wind-driven accretion) are considered, the desaturation effect can be…
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