Dusty disks as safe havens for terrestrial planets: Effect of the back-reaction of solid material on gas
Zs. Reg\'aly, A N\'emeth, G. Krup\'anszky, Zs. S\'andor

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamic simulations to show that including the back-reaction of solid material on gas significantly influences the migration torques on low-mass planets, favoring their survival and growth.
Contribution
It demonstrates that accounting for solid-gas back-reaction in planetary disk models alters torque predictions, highlighting its importance in planetary formation simulations.
Findings
Back-reaction increases positive torque occurrences.
Solid accretion with weak coupling enhances planetary survival.
Including back-reaction is crucial for accurate planet migration modeling.
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that there is considerable variation in the dust-to-gas density ratio in the vicinity of low-mass planets undergoing growth. This can lead to a significant change in the planetary momentum exerted by the gas and solid material. However, due to the low dust-to-gas mass ratio of protoplanetary disks, the back-reaction of the solid material, is often neglected. We study the effect of the back-reaction of solid material on the torques felt by low-mass planets. We performed locally isothermal, 2D hydrodynamic simulations of planet-disk interactions. Low-mass planets in the range of 0.1-10MEarth accrete only solid material. Simulations were compared with and without taking into account the back-reaction of the solid material on the gas. The solid component was assumed to have a fixed Stokes number in the range 0.01-10. In general, the inclusion of back-reaction…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Laser-induced spectroscopy and plasma
