MRI-active inner regions of protoplanetary discs. I. A detailed model of disc structure
Marija R. Jankovic, James E. Owen, Subhanjoy Mohanty, Jonathan C., Tan

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive steady-state model of the inner regions of protoplanetary discs, incorporating detailed physics such as heating, ionization, and dust effects, to better understand the formation of close-in super-Earth planets.
Contribution
It introduces a fully coupled, detailed model of MRI-active inner discs, including processes like heating, ionization, and dust effects, advancing previous simplified models.
Findings
Inner disc is optically thick with midplane heating dominant.
Pressure maximum location depends on ionization threshold temperature.
Inner disc is convectively unstable.
Abstract
Short-period super-Earth-sized planets are common. Explaining how they form near their present orbits requires understanding the structure of the inner regions of protoplanetary discs. Previous studies have argued that the hot inner protoplanetary disc is unstable to the magneto-rotational instability (MRI) due to thermal ionization of potassium, and that a local gas pressure maximum forms at the outer edge of this MRI-active zone. Here we present a steady-state model for inner discs accreting viscously, primarily due to the MRI. The structure and MRI-viscosity of the inner disc are fully coupled in our model; moreover, we account for many processes omitted in previous such models, including disc heating by both accretion and stellar irradiation, vertical energy transport, realistic dust opacities, dust effects on disc ionization and non-thermal sources of ionization. For a disc around…
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