Dust distribution around low-mass planets on converging orbits
Francesco Marzari, Gennaro D'Angelo

TL;DR
This study investigates how convergent migration of super-Earths in protoplanetary disks influences dust distribution, revealing observable features that depend on resonance type and orbital location, with implications for planet formation theories.
Contribution
It combines hydrodynamic and dust evolution models to analyze dust signatures of resonant super-Earth pairs, highlighting conditions for resonance capture and observable dust features.
Findings
Convergent migration occurs when the outer planet is more massive.
Low degree resonances like 2:1 are favored close to the star.
Dust features are most observable in 2:1 resonances.
Abstract
Super-Earths can form at large orbital radii and migrate inward due to tidal interactions with the circumstellar disk. In this scenario, convergent migration may occur and lead to the formation of resonant pairs of planets. We explore the conditions under which convergent migration and resonance capture take place, and what dynamical consequences can be expected on the dust distribution surrounding the resonant pair. We combine hydrodynamic planet--disk interaction models with dust evolution calculations to investigate the signatures produced in the dust distribution by a pair of planets in mean-motion resonances. We find that convergent migration takes place when the outer planet is the more massive. However, convergent migration also depends on the local properties of the disk, and divergent migration may result as well. For similar disk parameters, the capture in low degree…
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