Dust and gas density evolution at a radial pressure bump in protoplanetary disks
Dust and gas density evolution at a radial pressure bump in protoplanetary disks
Authors:
Taki et al
Abstract:
We
investigate the simultaneous evolution of dust and gas density profiles
at a radial pressure bump located in a protoplanetary disk. If dust
particles are treated as test particles, a radial pressure bump traps
dust particles that drift radially inward. As the dust particles become
more concentrated at the gas pressure bump, however, the drag force from
dust to gas (back-reaction), which is ignored in a test-particle
approach, deforms the pressure bump. We find that the pressure bump is
completely deformed by the back-reaction when the dust-to-gas mass ratio
reaches ∼1 for a slower bump restoration. The direct gravitational
instability of dust particles is inhibited by the bump destruction. In
the dust-enriched region, the radial pressure support becomes ∼10−100
times lower than the global value set initially. Although the pressure
bump is a favorable place for streaming instability (SI), the flattened
pressure gradient inhibits SI from forming large particle clumps
corresponding to 100−1000 km sized bodies, which has been previously
proposed. If SI occurs there, the dust clumps formed would be 10−100
times smaller, that is, of about 1−100 km.
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