Planet population synthesis driven by pebble accretion in cluster environments
Nelson Ndugu, Bertram Bitsch, and Edward Jurua

TL;DR
This study models planet formation via pebble accretion in cluster environments, showing how external heating influences giant planet formation and migration, aligning some results with observations but highlighting discrepancies at low metallicity.
Contribution
It introduces a planet population synthesis model considering background heating effects in clusters, revealing the impact on giant planet formation and migration patterns.
Findings
Giant planets migrate over large distances due to high disc viscosity.
Cold Jupiters mainly form in the outer disc, hot Jupiters in the inner disc.
Cluster environment heating suppresses giant planet formation at low metallicity.
Abstract
The evolution of protoplanetary discs embedded in stellar clusters depends on the age and the stellar density in which they are embedded. Stellar clusters of young age and high stellar surface density destroy protoplanetary discs by external photoevaporation and stellar encounters. Here we consider the effect of background heating from newly formed stellar clusters on the structure of protoplanetary discs and how it affects the formation of planets in these discs. Our planet formation model is build on the core accretion scenario including pebble accretion. We synthesize planet populations that we compare to observations. The giant planets in our simulations migrate over large distances due to the fast type-II migration regime induced by a high disc viscosity (). Cold Jupiters (r>1 AU) originate preferably from the outer disc, while hot Jupiters (r<0.1 AU)…
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