Giant planet formation via pebble accretion across different stellar masses
Sho Shibata, Ravit Helled

TL;DR
This study models giant planet formation via pebble accretion across different stellar masses, highlighting how envelope contraction rates, grain opacity, and heavy-element enrichment influence the formation timescale and occurrence of cold Jupiters.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent formation model that accounts for various stellar and disk parameters, revealing the importance of slow envelope contraction and grain opacity in cold Jupiter formation.
Findings
Slow envelope contraction is necessary to match observed cold Jupiter rates.
High grain opacity (ISM level) prolongs contraction, affecting planet formation timescales.
Lower grain opacity leads to faster core growth and overproduction of cold Jupiters around certain stars.
Abstract
The occurrence rate of cold Jupiters was found to depend on stellar mass. The formation environment in the protoplanetary disks regulates core formation and the subsequent gas accretion. In this study, we simulate giant planet formation via pebble accretion accounting for various stellar masses, core formation times, disk turbulent viscosities, and grain opacities. We use a self-consistent formation model that calculates the solid accretion rate and gas accretion rate of growing protoplanets. We investigate how the planetary formation, in particular, the contraction of the envelope, and the formation timescale change under different conditions. We find that to reproduce the observed occurrence rate of cold Jupiters, giant planets must undergo slow envelope contraction after they reach pebble isolation, which lasts for several Myrs. Such a slow contraction phase can be achieved when the…
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