Direct Formation of Planetary Embryos in Self-Gravitating Disks
Hans Baehr, Zhaohuan Zhu, Chao-Chin Yang

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates through 3D hydrodynamical simulations that self-gravitating disks can rapidly form dense solid bodies at wide orbits, potentially seeding planet formation at large separations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation approach showing how dust self-gravity in gravitoturbulent disks leads to dense clump formation, advancing understanding of planet formation at wide orbital distances.
Findings
Solid bodies up to several Earth masses form at wide orbits.
Dust of size St=1 produces the most massive clumps.
Including dust backreaction results in smaller, more numerous clumps.
Abstract
Giant planets have been discovered at large separations from the central star. Moreover, a striking number of young circumstellar disks have gas and/or dust gaps at large orbital separations, potentially driven by embedded planetary objects. To form massive planets at large orbital separations through core accretion within disk lifetime, however, an early solid body to seed pebble and gas accretion is desirable. Young protoplanetary disks are likely self-gravitating, and these gravitoturbulent disks may efficiently concentrate solid material at the midplane driven by spiral waves. We run 3D local hydrodynamical simulations of gravitoturbulent disks with Lagrangian dust particles to determine whether particle and gas self-gravity can lead to the formation of dense solid bodies, seeding later planet formation. When self-gravity between dust particles is included, solids of size…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
