A self-consistent model for dust settling and the vertical shear instability in protoplanetary disks
Yuya Fukuhara, Satoshi Okuzumi

TL;DR
This paper develops a semi-analytic, self-consistent model for dust distribution and turbulence in protoplanetary disks, revealing how dust size influences turbulence strength and dust settling.
Contribution
It introduces a novel semi-analytic model linking dust distribution with VSI-driven turbulence using empirical diffusion coefficients from hydrodynamical simulations.
Findings
Stable dust equilibrium exists for small grains with turbulence level alpha_z ~ 10^{-3}
Larger grains lead to runaway settling, reducing turbulence and causing highly settled dust rings
The model explains observed dust ring structures in protoplanetary disks
Abstract
The spatial distribution of dust particles in protoplanetary disks affects dust evolution and planetesimal formation processes. The vertical shear instability (VSI) is one of the candidate hydrodynamic mechanisms that can generate turbulence in the outer disk region and affect dust diffusion. Turbulence driven by the VSI has a predominant vertical motion that can prevent dust settling. On the other hand, the dust distribution controls the spatial distribution of the gas cooling rate, thereby affecting the strength of VSI-driven turbulence. Here, we present a semi-analytic model that determines the vertical dust distribution and the strength of VSI-driven turbulence in a self-consistent manner. The model uses an empirical formula for the vertical diffusion coefficient in VSI-driven turbulence obtained from our recent hydrodynamical simulations. The formula returns the vertical diffusion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies
