Migration of gap-opening planets in 3D stellar-irradiated accretion disks
Ond\v{r}ej Chrenko, David Nesvorn\'y

TL;DR
This study uses 3D hydrodynamic simulations with radiation transfer to show how stellar irradiation can slow or reverse the inward migration of gap-opening planets in protoplanetary disks, potentially stabilizing giant planet orbits.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed 3D analysis of stellar irradiation effects on planet migration, showing how gap edge heating influences torque and migration direction.
Findings
Temperature inversion occurs at the irradiated outer gap edge.
Torque reduction is significant for planets with 0.1 to 0.7 Jupiter masses.
Stellar irradiation can stall Type II migration, aiding giant planet orbit stabilization.
Abstract
Context. The origin of giant planets at moderate separations au is still not fully understood because numerical studies of Type II migration in protoplanetary disks often predict a decay of the semi-major axis that is too fast. According to recent 2D simulations, inward migration of a gap-opening planet can be slowed down or even reversed if the outer gap edge becomes heated by irradiation from the central star, and puffed up. Aims. Here we study how stellar irradiation reduces the disk-driven torque and affects migration in more realistic 3D disks. Methods. Using 3D hydrodynamic simulations with radiation transfer, we investigated the static torque acting on a single gap-opening planet embedded in a passively heated accretion disk. Results. Our simulations confirm that a temperature inversion is established at the irradiated outer gap edge and the local…
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