On the Gravitational Collapse of Small Dust Grains in Self-gravitating Disk Structures
Hans Baehr, Ken Rice, Chao-Chin Yang, Cassandra Hall

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates through hydrodynamic simulations that small dust grains in massive, gravitationally unstable disks can concentrate and form planetary embryos, potentially accelerating planet formation in the outer disk regions.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how small dust grains can overcome diffusion and form planetary seeds in self-gravitating disks, extending previous models to smaller grains and different disk conditions.
Findings
Small grains with St=0.01 can form planetary embryos at metallicities Z ≥ 0.02.
Planetary embryos of 0.1 to 1 Earth mass can form in outer disk regions.
Formation of planetary seeds can speed up planet assembly in outer disk areas.
Abstract
Planet formation may begin much earlier than previously expected, when the protoplanetary disk is still massive and gravitationally unstable. It has been proposed that solid grains can concentrate in the spiral arms of self-gravitating disks, leading to the formation of planetary embryos or cores that can greatly accelerate the process of planet formation. We perform hydrodynamic simulations of self-gravitating gas and even smaller dust grains than previously investigated in 3-dimensional shearing box simulations to explore the conditions necessary to form these planetary seeds. Focusing on small grains of dimensionless stopping time and shorter, we find that disk metallicities can overcome the disruptive effects of dust diffusion among these small dust grains. In the outer reaches of a gravitationally unstable disk, these models correspond to grains…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
