Effect of wind-driven accretion on planetary migration
C. N. Kimmig, C. P. Dullemond, W. Kley

TL;DR
This paper explores how wind-driven accretion influences planetary migration, revealing it can cause rapid outward migration and significantly alter migration rates, unlike traditional viscous models.
Contribution
It introduces a simplified model of wind-driven accretion effects on planetary migration and identifies conditions leading to outward migration.
Findings
Wind-driven accretion replenishes the co-orbital region differently than viscous accretion.
Under certain conditions, wind-driven accretion can cause rapid outward migration.
An analytic expression for parameters leading to outward migration is derived.
Abstract
Planetary migration is a key link between planet formation models and observed exoplanet statistics. So far the theory of migration has focused on the interaction of planets with an inviscid or viscously evolving disk. Turbulent viscosity is thought to be the main driver of disk evolution and is known to affect the migration process. Recently, the topic of wind-driven accretion is experiencing a renaissance, as evidence is mounting that PPDs may be less turbulent than previously thought, and 3-D non-ideal MHD modeling of the wind-launching process is maturing. Aim: We wish to investigate how wind-driven accretion may affect migration. We aim for a qualitative exploration of the main effects, rather than a quantitative prediction. Methods: We perform 2-D hydrodynamic simulations with the FARGO3D code in the -plane. The vertical coordinate and the launching of the wind are not…
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