Migration of Jupiter mass planets in discs with laminar accretion flows
E. Lega, A. Morbidelli, R.P. Nelson, X.S. Ramos, A. Crida, W. Bethune,, and K. Batygin

TL;DR
This study investigates how vortex-driven migration of Jupiter-mass planets in low-viscosity, layered protoplanetary discs is influenced by radial gas advection due to disc winds, revealing conditions that slow or accelerate planetary migration.
Contribution
It introduces a new model of vortex-driven planet migration considering radial gas advection from disc winds, highlighting the impact of accreting layer thickness on migration speed.
Findings
Migration is driven by vortices and is inward until vortex disappearance.
Migration speed depends on the ability of the planet to block accretion flow.
Thin accreting layers allow unimpeded flow, resulting in slower planetary migration.
Abstract
Migration of giant planets in discs with low viscosity has been studied recently. The proportionality between migration speed and the disc's viscosity is broken by the presence of vortices that appear at the edges of the planet-induced gap. Our goal is to investigate vortex-driven migration in low-viscosity discs in the presence of radial advection of gas, as expected from angular momentum removal by magnetised disc winds. We performed three dimensional simulations using the grid-based code FARGOCA. We mimicked the effects of a disc wind by applying a synthetic torque on a surface layer of the disc characterised by a prescribed column density Sigma_A so that it results in a disc accretion rate of 10^-8 Solar masses per year. Discs with this structure are called 'layered' and the layer where the torque is applied is denoted as 'active'. We also consider the case of accretion focussed…
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