Orbital evolution of eccentric low-mass companions embedded in gaseous disks: testing the local approximation
F. J. Sanchez-Salcedo

TL;DR
This study evaluates the accuracy of the local approximation for modeling the orbital evolution of eccentric low-mass companions in gaseous disks, using hydrodynamical simulations to validate analytical predictions.
Contribution
It tests the validity of the dynamical friction local approximation for eccentric orbits through hydrodynamical simulations, establishing conditions for its applicability based on softening radius.
Findings
Close agreement between analytical and simulation results when R_soft is below a threshold.
The local approximation is valid if the accretion radius is smaller than Rtilde_soft.
The validity condition imposes an upper limit on the perturber's mass.
Abstract
We study the tidal interaction between a low-mass companion (e.g., a protoplanet or a black hole) in orbit about a central mass, and the accretion disk within which it is submerged. We present results for a companion on a coplanar orbit with eccentricity e between 0.1 and 0.6. For these eccentricities, dynamical friction arguments in its local approximation, that is, ignoring differential rotation and the curvature of the orbit, provide simple analytical expressions for the rates of energy and angular momentum exchange between the disk and the companion. We examine the range of validity of the dynamical friction approach by conducting a series of hydrodynamical simulations of a perturber with softening radius R_soft embedded in a two-dimensional disk. We find close agreement between predictions and the values in simulations provided that R_soft is chosen sufficiently small, below a…
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