Protoplanetary Disk Viscosity's Effect on Exoplanet Migration
Stellar irradiated discs and implications on migration of embedded planets III: viscosity transitions
Authors:
Bitsch et al
Abstract:
The
migration strength and direction of embedded low-mass planets depends
on the disc structure. In discs with an efficient radiative transport,
the migration can be directed outwards for planets with more than 3-5
Earth masses. This is due to the entropy driven corotation torque, a
process that extends the lifetimes of growing planetary embryos. We
investigate the influence on the disc structure caused by a jump in the
alpha parameter of the viscosity to model a dead-zone structure in the
disc. We focus on M-dot discs, which have a constant net mass flux.
Using the resulting disc structure, we investigate the consequences for
the formation of planetesimals and determine the regions of outward
migration for proto-planets. We performed numerical hydrosimulations of
M-dot discs in the r-z-plane. We used the explicit/implicit
hydrodynamical code FARGOCA that includes a full tensor viscosity and
stellar irradiation as well as a two-temperature solver that includes
radiation transport in the flux-limited diffusion approximation.
Viscosity transitions inside the disc create transitions in density that
stop inward migration for small planets through the so-called "planet
trap" mechanism. This mechanism also works for planets down to M_P
greater than 0.5M_E. Additionally, the viscosity transitions change the
pressure gradient in the disc, which facilitates planetesimal formation
via the streaming instability. However, a very steep transition in
viscosity is needed to achieve in a pressure bump in the disc. The
transition in viscosity facilitates planetesimal formation and can stop
the migration of small-mass planets (M_P greater than 0.5M_E), but still
does not halt inward migration of smaller planets and planetesimals
that are affected by gas drag. A very steep, probably unrealistic
viscosity gradient is needed to trap planets of smaller masses and halt
gas-drag-driven planetesimal migration at a pressure bump.
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