Giant planet formation at the pressure maxima of protoplanetary disks II. A hybrid accretion scenario
O. M. Guilera, Zs. S\'andor, M. P. Ronco, J. Venturini, M. M., Miller Bertolami

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that pressure maxima in protoplanetary disks efficiently trap dust, facilitate planetesimal formation, and enable rapid giant planet formation through hybrid accretion of pebbles and planetesimals within about a million years.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive numerical simulation showing the full process of giant planet formation at pressure maxima, combining dust evolution, planetesimal formation, and hybrid accretion.
Findings
Pressure maxima efficiently trap dust and promote planetesimal formation.
Massive planetary cores form rapidly (~10^4 years) via pebble accretion.
Giant planets can form within 1 million years through hybrid accretion processes.
Abstract
Recent observations of protoplanetary disks have revealed ring-like structures that can be associated to pressure maxima. Pressure maxima are known to be dust collectors and planet migration traps. Most of planet formation works are based either on the pebble accretion model or on the planetesimal accretion model. However, recent studies proposed the possible formation of Jupiter by the hybrid accretion of pebbles and planetesimals. We aim to study the full process of planet formation consisting of dust evolution, planetesimal formation and planet growth at a pressure maximum in a protoplanetary disk. We compute, through numerical simulations, the gas and dust evolution, including dust growth, fragmentation, radial drift and particle accumulation at a pressure bump. We also consider the formation of planetesimals by streaming instability and the formation of a moon-size embryo that…
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