The Roles of Dust Growth in the Temperature Evolution and Snow Line Migration in Magnetically Accreting Protoplanetary Disks
Katsushi Kondo, Satoshi Okuzumi, Shoji Mori

TL;DR
This study examines how dust grain growth influences the temperature structure and snow line migration in magnetically accreting protoplanetary disks, highlighting the importance of dust evolution in planet formation models.
Contribution
It combines a temperature model with dust grain growth effects, revealing how grain size impacts disk heating and snow line migration timing.
Findings
Grain growth to 10-100 μm maximizes midplane temperature.
Millimeter-sized grains delay snow line migration by up to a few Myr.
Dust evolution significantly affects planet formation conditions.
Abstract
The temperature structure of protoplanetary disks provides an important constraint on where in the disks rocky planets like our own form. Recent nonideal magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) simulations have shown that the internal Joule heating associated with magnetically driven disk accretion is inefficient at heating the disk midplane. A disk temperature model based on the MHD simulations predicts that in a disk around a solar-mass young star, the water snow line can move inside the current Earth's orbit within 1 Myr after disk formation. However, the efficiency of the internal Joule heating depends on the disk's ionization and opacity structures, both of which are governed by dust grains. In this study, we investigate these effects by combing the previous temperature model for magnetically accreting disks with a parameterized model for the grain size and vertical distribution. Grain growth…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies
