Planet Formation: An Optimized Population-Synthesis Approach
John Chambers

TL;DR
This study develops a population synthesis model for planet formation, incorporating pebble and gas accretion and migration, to reproduce observed exoplanet distributions and understand planetary system characteristics.
Contribution
It introduces an optimized, simplified model for planetary growth that effectively matches observed exoplanet populations using particle swarm optimization.
Findings
The pebble isolation mass increases with orbital distance, limiting giant planet formation to outer disks.
The model reproduces the frequency and distribution of giant planets and brown dwarfs.
Solar System analogs form in 1-2% of systems with multiple protoplanets.
Abstract
The physics of planet formation is investigated using a population synthesis approach. We develop a simple model for planetary growth including pebble and gas accretion, and orbital migration in an evolving protoplanetary disk. The model is run for a population of 2000 stars with a range of disk masses and radii, and initial protoplanet orbits. The resulting planetary distribution is compared with the observed population of extrasolar planets, and the model parameters are improved iteratively using a particle swarm optimization scheme. The characteristics of the final planetary systems are mainly controlled by the pebble isolation mass, which is the mass of a planet that perturbs nearby gas enough to halt the inward flux of drifting pebbles and stop growth. The pebble isolation mass increases with orbital distance so that giant planet cores can only form in the outer disk. Giants…
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