Planet formation and migration near the silicate sublimation front in protoplanetary disks
Mario Flock, Neal J. Turner, Gijs D. Mulders, Yasuhiro, Hasegawa, Richard P. Nelson, Bertram Bitsch

TL;DR
This study models the conditions near the dust sublimation front in protoplanetary disks to explain the observed distribution of close-in exoplanets and their formation and migration processes.
Contribution
It introduces detailed 2D radiation hydrostatic disk models that incorporate dust sublimation and migration traps, linking disk features to observed planet occurrence rates.
Findings
Migration traps align with observed planet periods of 10-22 days.
Dust grain size affects the location of migration traps.
The dust sublimation zone is key for close-in planet formation.
Abstract
The increasing number of newly detected exoplanets at short orbital periods raises questions about their formation and migration histories. A particular puzzle that requires explanation arises from one of the key results of the Kepler mission, namely the increase in the planetary occurrence rate with orbital period up to 10 days for F, G, K and M stars. We investigate the conditions for planet formation and migration near the dust sublimation front in protostellar disks around young Sun-like stars. For this analysis we use iterative 2D radiation hydrostatic disk models which include irradiation by the star, and dust sublimation and deposition depending on the local temperature and vapor pressure. We perform a parameter study by varying the magnetized turbulence onset temperature, the accretion stress, the dust mass fraction, and the mass accretion rate. Our models feature a gas-only…
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