An inflationary disk phase to explain extended protoplanetary dust disks
Raphael Marschall, Alessandro Morbidelli

TL;DR
This paper proposes an inflationary phase in protoplanetary disks driven by high initial viscosity and short infall timescales, explaining the formation of extended dust disks, multiple planetesimal locations, and CAI transport in the Solar System.
Contribution
It introduces a new model with an inflationary disk phase driven by specific parameters, aligning with observed Solar System features.
Findings
High initial viscosity and short infall timescales produce extended disks.
Temperature-dependent fragmentation leads to larger, more massive icy planetesimals.
Large centrifugal radius prevents CAI transport and multiple planetesimal formation.
Abstract
Understanding planetesimal formation is an essential first step to understanding planet formation. The distribution of these first solid bodies will drive the locations where planetary embryos can grow. We seek to understand the parameter space of possible protoplanetary disk formation and evolution models of our Solar System. A good protoplanetary disk scenario for the Solar System must meet at least the following three criteria: 1) an extended dust disk (at least 45 au); 2) formation of planetesimals in at least two distinct locations; and 3) transport of high temperatures condensates (i.e., calcium-aluminium-rich inclusion, CAIs) to the outer disk. We explore a large parameter space to study the effect of the disk viscosity, the timescale of infall of material into the disk, the distance within which material is deposited into the disk, and the fragmentation threshold of dust…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
