X-Ray Ionization of Planet-Opened Gaps in Protostellar Disks
Stacy Y. Kim (1, 2, 3), Neal J. Turner (4) ((1) California, Institute of Technology, (2) Ohio State University, (3) University of Surrey,, UK, (4) Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology)

TL;DR
This study investigates how X-ray ionization from young stars affects magnetic coupling and gas flow in planet-opened gaps within protostellar disks, influencing planet growth and disk evolution.
Contribution
It provides detailed calculations of X-ray ionization effects and magnetic coupling in planet gaps, highlighting the importance of non-ideal MHD processes.
Findings
X-ray ionization rates are comparable to cosmic rays near giant planets.
Magnetic coupling can enable Hall shear instability and winds in the gaps.
High diffusivities prevent magneto-rotational turbulence in the gap regions.
Abstract
Young planets with masses approaching Jupiter's have tides strong enough to clear gaps around their orbits in the protostellar disk. Gas flow through the gaps regulates the planets' further growth and governs the disks' evolution. Magnetic forces may drive that flow if the gas is sufficiently ionized to couple to the fields. We compute the ionizing effects of the X-rays from the central young star, using Monte Carlo radiative transfer calculations to find the spectrum of Compton-scattered photons reaching the planet's vicinity. The scattered X-rays ionize the gas at rates similar to or greater than the interstellar cosmic ray rate near planets the mass of Saturn and of Jupiter, located at 5 au and at 10 au, in disks with the interstellar mass fraction of sub-micron dust and with the dust depleted a factor 100. Solving a gas-grain recombination reaction network yields charged particle…
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