Dust settling and rings in the outer regions of protoplanetary discs subject to ambipolar diffusion
A. Riols, G. Lesur

TL;DR
This study investigates how non-ideal MHD effects, especially ambipolar diffusion, influence dust settling and ring formation in the outer regions of protoplanetary discs, revealing the importance of winds and large-scale circulation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed numerical simulations of dust dynamics considering ambipolar diffusion and winds, explaining observed dust layer thickness and ring structures.
Findings
Dust is confined in a thin layer (~0.4 AU at 30 AU) consistent with ALMA observations.
Dust rings form due to trapping within pressure maxima caused by ambipolar diffusion.
Large-scale circulation driven by MHD winds influences dust settling beyond simple diffusion models.
Abstract
MHD turbulence plays a crucial role in the dust dynamics of protoplanetary discs. It affects planet formation, vertical settling and is one possible origin of the large scale axisymmetric structures, such as rings, recently imaged by ALMA and SPHERE. Among the variety of MHD processes, the magnetorotational instability (MRI) has raised particular interest since it provides a source of turbulence and potentially organizes the flow into radial structures. However, the weak ionization of discs prevents the MRI from being excited beyond 1 AU. The strong sedimentation of millimetre dust measured in T-Tauri discs is also in contradiction with predictions based on ideal MRI turbulence. In this paper, we study the effects of non-ideal MHD and winds on the dynamics and sedimentation of dust grains. We consider a weakly ionized plasma subject to ambipolar diffusion characterizing the disc outer…
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