Evolution of dust in protoplanetary disks of eruptive stars
Eduard Vorobyov (1,2), Aleksandr M. Skliarevskii (2), Tamara Molyarova, (3), Vitaly Akimkin (3), Yaroslav Pavlyuchenkov (3), \'Agnes K\'osp\'al, (4,5,6), Hauyu Baobab Liu (7), Michihiro Takami (8), Anastasiia Topchieva (3), ((1) University of Vienna, Department of Astrophysics

TL;DR
This study investigates how luminosity bursts in young eruptive stars affect dust grain size distribution and spectral index in protoplanetary disks, revealing dynamic changes in dust growth and distribution post-burst.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical model simulating dust evolution during stellar luminosity bursts, highlighting the impact on snowline position and dust regrowth patterns.
Findings
Water snowline shifts outward during bursts.
Dust regrows faster at smaller radii post-burst.
A broad spectral index peak forms at ~10 au.
Abstract
Luminosity bursts in young FU Orionis-type stars warm up the surrounding disks of gas and dust, thus inflicting changes on their morphological and chemical composition. In this work, we aim at studying the effects that such bursts may have on the spatial distribution of dust grain sizes and the corresponding spectral index in protoplanetary disks. We use the numerical hydrodynamics code FEOSAD, which simulates the co-evolution of gas, dust, and volatiles in a protoplanetary disk, taking dust growth and back reaction on gas into account. The dependence of the maximum dust size on the water ice mantles is explicitly considered. The burst is initialized by increasing the luminosity of the central star to 100-300 L_sun for a time period of 100 yr. The water snowline shifts during the burst to a larger distance, resulting in the drop of the maximum dust size interior to the snowline position…
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