The water-ice line as a birthplace of planets: Implications of a species-dependent dust fragmentation threshold
Jonas M\"uller, Sofia Savvidou, Bertram Bitsch

TL;DR
This study uses self-consistent 2D hydrodynamical simulations to explore how a species-dependent dust fragmentation threshold at the water-ice line influences planet formation, migration, and disc structure.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation approach accounting for different dust fragmentation velocities for silicate and water-ice particles, revealing new effects at the ice line.
Findings
The water-ice line creates a zone of outward planetary migration.
A pressure bump slightly inside the ice line acts as a potential planetesimal formation site.
The effects are robust across various disc parameters.
Abstract
The thermodynamic structure of protoplanetary discs is determined by dust opacities, which depend on the size of the dust grains and their chemical composition. In the inner regions, the grain sizes are regulated by the level of turbulence (e.g. viscosity) and by the dust fragmentation velocity that represents the maximal velocity that grains can have at a collision before they fragment. Here, we perform self-consistently calculated 2D hydrodynamical simulations that consider a full grain size distribution of dust grains with a transition in the dust fragmentation velocity at the water-ice line. This approach accounts for the results of previous particle collision laboratory experiments, in which silicate particles typically have a lower dust fragmentation velocity than water-ice particles. Furthermore, we probe the effects of variations in the water abundance, the dust-to-gas…
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