Formation of close-in super-Earths in evolving protoplanetary disks due to disk winds
Masahiro Ogihara, Eiichiro Kokubo, Takeru K. Suzuki, Alessandro, Morbidelli

TL;DR
This study investigates how magnetically driven disk winds influence the formation and orbital evolution of close-in super-Earths, showing that such winds can suppress inward migration and reproduce observed planetary system configurations.
Contribution
It introduces a model incorporating disk winds into protoplanetary disk evolution, demonstrating their significant impact on type I migration and super-Earth formation.
Findings
Type I migration is often suppressed by disk winds.
Migration timescales are extended to about 1 million years.
Observed super-Earth distributions can be reproduced by the model.
Abstract
Planets with masses larger than about 0.1 Earth-masses undergo rapid inward migration (type I migration) in a standard protoplanetary disk. Recent magnetohydrodynamical simulations revealed the presence of magnetically driven disk winds, which would alter the disk profile and the type I migration in the close-in region. We investigate orbital evolution of planetary embryos in disks that viscously evolve under the effects of disk winds. The aim is to discuss effects of altered disk profiles on type I migration. In addition, we aim to examine whether observed distributions of close-in super-Earths can be reproduced by simulations that include effects of disk winds. We perform N-body simulations of super-Earth formation from planetary embryos, in which a recent model for disk evolution is used. We explore a wide range of parameters and draw general trends. We also carry out N-body…
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