Quantifying the Impact of the Dust Torque on the Migration of Low-mass Planets
Octavio M. Guilera, Pablo Benitez-Llambay, Marcelo M. Miller Bertolami, and Martin E. Pessah

TL;DR
This study investigates how dust torques influence the migration of low-mass planets, revealing that under certain conditions, dust can reverse inward migration and significantly affect planet formation trajectories.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic quantification of dust torque effects on low-mass planet migration across various disk conditions.
Findings
Dust torques can reverse inward migration for planets with mass less than 10 Earth masses.
Low-mass planets can migrate outward beyond the water ice-line due to dust torques.
Dust torques significantly influence the formation and migration history of planetary embryos.
Abstract
Disk solids are critical in many planet formation processes, however, their effect on planet migration remains largely unexplored. Here we assess for the first time this important issue by building on the systematic measurements of dust torques on an embedded planet by Benitez-Llambay & Pessah (2018). Adopting standard models for the gaseous disk and its solid content, we quantify the impact of the dust torque for a wide range of conditions describing the disk/planet system. We show that the total torque can be positive and revert inward planet migration for planetary cores with . We compute formation tracks for low-mass embryos for conditions usually invoked when modeling planet formation processes. Our most important conclusion is that dust torques can have a significant impact on the migration and formation history of planetary embryos. The most…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Space Exploration and Technology · Planetary Science and Exploration
