Influence of grain growth on the thermal structure of protoplanetary discs
Sofia Savvidou, Bertram Bitsch, Michiel Lambrechts

TL;DR
This study uses 2D hydrodynamical simulations with self-consistent dust opacity calculations to show how grain growth influences the thermal structure and planet migration in protoplanetary discs, improving modeling accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent method for calculating dust opacity considering grain growth, composition, and abundance, enhancing the realism of protoplanetary disc simulations.
Findings
Grain size distribution affects disc thermal structure and aspect ratio gradients.
Including realistic grain growth reduces planet migration rates.
Water ice line position depends on viscosity, surface density, and dust-to-gas ratio.
Abstract
The thermal structure of a protoplanetary disc is regulated by the opacity that dust grains provide. However, previous works have often considered simplified prescriptions for the dust opacity in hydrodynamical disc simulations, e.g. by considering only a single particle size. In the present work we perform 2D hydrodynamical simulations of protoplanetary discs where the opacity is self-consistently calculated for the dust population, taking into account the particle size, composition and abundance. We first compare simulations using single grain sizes to two different multi-grain size distributions at different levels of turbulence strengths, parameterized through the -viscosity, and different gas surface densities. Assuming a single dust size leads to inaccurate calculations of the thermal structure of discs, because the grain size dominating the opacity increases with orbital…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
