The Effect of the Approach to Gas Disk Gravitational Instability on the Rapid Formation of Gas Giant Planets
Alan P. Boss

TL;DR
This study models the gravitational instability of initially stable gas disks with various cooling rates, demonstrating that such disks can rapidly form gas giant planets within 20 au, aligning with previous findings.
Contribution
It introduces models of initially stable gas disks with different cooling parameters, showing they can still fragment into gas giants, expanding understanding of planet formation mechanisms.
Findings
Disks with initial Q=2.7 eventually fragment into dense clumps.
Resulting protoplanet masses and orbits match previous models.
Rapid gas giant formation is possible from stable disks with sufficient mass.
Abstract
Observational evidence suggests that gas disk instability may be responsible for the formation of at least some gas giant exoplanets, particularly massive or distant gas giants. With regard to close-in gas giants, Boss (2017) used the cooling approximation to calculate hydrodynamical models of inner gas disk instability, finding that provided disks with low values of the initial minimum Toomre stability parameter (i.e., inside 20 au) form, fragmentation into self-gravitating clumps could occur even for as high as 100 (i.e., extremely slow cooling). Those results implied that the evolution of disks toward low must be taken into account. This paper presents such models: initial disk masses of 0.091 extending from 4 to 20 au around a 1 protostar, with a range (1 to 100) of cooling parameters, the same as in Boss (2017), but with…
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