Changing disc compositions via internal photoevaporation I: Solar-mass stars
Julia Lena Lienert, Bertram Bitsch, Thomas Henning

TL;DR
This study investigates how internal photoevaporation influences the chemical evolution of protoplanetary discs around solar-mass stars, especially affecting the C/O ratio and water content, using a semi-analytical 1D disc model.
Contribution
It demonstrates that internal photoevaporation significantly alters disc chemistry by halting inward pebble drift and removing outer gas, impacting observable chemical signatures.
Findings
Photoevaporation lowers the inner disc's C/O ratio.
Gaps from giant planets allow gas passage, raising the C/O ratio.
Water content in the inner disc is elevated due to evaporation cycles.
Abstract
The chemical evolution of protoplanetary discs is not fully understood, several factors influence the final distribution of disc material. One such factor are inward drifting and evaporating pebbles that enrich the inner disc with vapour. In particular, it is first enriched with water vapour, resulting in a low C/O ratio, before carbon-rich gas from the outer disc is transported inwards elevating the C/O ratio again. However, it is unclear how internal photoevaporation, which carries away gas and opens gaps that block inward drifting pebbles, affects the chemical composition of the disc. We aim to study these effects in discs around solar-like stars, where we especially focus on the C/O ratio and the water content. The simulations are carried out using a semi-analytical 1D disc model. Our code chemcomp includes viscous evolution and heating, pebble growth and drift, pebble evaporation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Thin Films · Fluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer
