Pebble isolation mass --- scaling law and implications for the formation of super-Earths and gas giants
Bertram Bitsch, Alessandro Morbidelli, Anders Johansen, Elena Lega,, Michiel Lambrechts, Aur\'elien Crida

TL;DR
This paper derives a new scaling law for the pebble isolation mass in protoplanetary discs, considering various disc parameters, and explores its implications for planet formation, especially the growth of giant planets.
Contribution
The study provides an expanded, more comprehensive scaling law for pebble isolation mass that includes disc viscosity and particle size effects, improving planet formation models.
Findings
Small pebbles can drift through the pressure bump at pebble isolation mass.
Turbulent diffusion can increase the pebble isolation mass by up to a factor of two.
Including the new scaling law results in larger core masses for giant planets.
Abstract
The growth of a planetary core by pebble accretion stops at the so called pebble isolation mass, when the core generates a pressure bump that traps drifting pebbles outside its orbit. If the isolation mass is very small, then gas accretion is protracted and the planet remains at a few Earth masses with a mainly solid composition. For larger values of the pebble isolation mass, the planet might be able to accrete gas from the protoplanetary disc and grow into a gas giant. Previous works have determined a scaling of the pebble isolation mass with cube of the disc aspect ratio. Here we expand on previous measurements and explore the dependency of the pebble isolation mass on all relevant parameters of the protoplanetary disc. We use 3D hydrodynamical simulations to measure the pebble isolation mass and derive a simple scaling law that captures the dependence on the local disc structure and…
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