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Inward and outward migration of massive planets: moving towards a stalling radius

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posted on 2022-07-13, 08:30 authored by Chiara E Scardoni, Cathie J Clarke, Giovanni P Rosotti, Richard A Booth, Richard D Alexander, Enrico Ragusa

Recent studies on the planet-dominated regime of Type II migration showed that, contrary to the conventional wisdom, massive planets can migrate outwards. Using ‘fixed-planet’ simulations, these studies found a correlation between the sign of the torques acting on the planet and the parameter K′ (which describes the depth of the gap carved by the planet in the disc). We perform ‘live-planet’ simulations exploring a range of K′ and disc mass values to test and extend these results. The excitation of planet eccentricity in live-planet simulations breaks the direct dependence of migration rate (rate of change of semimajor axis) on the torques imposed, an effect that ‘fixed-planet’ simulations cannot treat. By disentangling the contribution to the torque due to the semimajor axis evolution from that due to the eccentricity evolution, we recover the relation between the magnitude and sign of migration and K′ and argue that this relation may be better expressed in terms of the related gap depth parameter K. We present a toy model in which the sign of planetary migration changes at a limiting value of K, through which we explore planets’ migration in viscously evolving discs. The existence of the torque reversal shapes the planetary system’s architecture by accumulating planets either at the stalling radius or in a band around it (defined by the interplay between the planet migration and the disc evolution). In either case, planets pile up in the area 1–10 au, disfavouring hot Jupiter formation through Type II migration in the planet-dominated regime.

History

Author affiliation

Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Volume

514

Issue

4

Pagination

5478 - 5492

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP) for Royal Astronomical Society

issn

0035-8711

eissn

1365-2966

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-07-13

Language

en

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