Kinetic Field Theory Applied to Planetesimal Formation I: Freely Streaming Dust Particles
Jiahan Shi, Matthias Bartelmann, Hubert Klahr, Cornelis P. Dullemond

TL;DR
This paper applies kinetic field theory to model the formation of planetesimals from streaming dust particles, revealing a universal power-law behavior in the density spectrum that suggests scale-invariant structure formation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of kinetic field theory to planetesimal formation, linking initial particle distributions to evolved density structures in a simplified streaming model.
Findings
Density power spectrum develops a universal $k^{-3}$ tail at small scales.
Initial conditions do not constrain the subsequent structure evolution.
Scale-invariant structures form below a characteristic length scale.
Abstract
Planet formation in the solar system was started when the first planetesimals were formed from the gravitational collapse of pebble clouds. Numerical simulations of this process, especially in the framework of streaming instability, produce various power laws for the initial mass function for planetesimals. While recent advances have shed light on turbulence and its role in particle clustering, a comprehensive theoretical framework linking turbulence characteristics to particle cluster properties and planetesimal mass function remains incomplete. Recently, a kinetic field theory for ensembles of point-like classical particles in or out of equilibrium has been applied to cosmic structure formation. This theory encodes the dynamics of a classical particle ensemble by a generating functional specified by the initial probability distribution of particles in phase space and their equations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
