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The role of drag and gravity on dust concentration in a gravitationally unstable disc

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posted on 2024-02-06, 10:29 authored by Sahl Rowther, Rebecca Nealon, Farzana Meru, James Wurster, Hossam Aly, Richard Alexander, Ken Rice, Richard A Booth

We carry out three dimensional smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations to study the role of gravitational and drag forces on the concentration of large dust grains (St > 1) in the spiral arms of gravitationally unstable protoplanetary discs, and the resulting implications for planet formation. We find that both drag and gravity play an important role in the evolution of large dust grains. If we include both, grains that would otherwise be partially decoupled will become well coupled and trace the spirals. For the dust grains most influenced by drag (with Stokes numbers near unity), the dust disc quickly becomes gravitationally unstable and rapidly forms clumps with masses between 0.15 − 6M⊕. A large fraction of clumps are below the threshold where runaway gas accretion can occur. However, if dust self-gravity is neglected, the dust is unable to form clumps, despite still becoming trapped in the gas spirals. When large dust grains are unable to feel either gas gravity or drag, the dust is unable to trace the gas spirals. Hence, full physics is needed to properly simulate dust in gravitationally unstable discs. Dust trapping of large grains in spiral arms of discs stable to gas fragmentation could explain planet formation in very young discs by a population of planetesimals formed due to the combined roles of drag and gravity in the earliest stages of a disc’s evolution. Furthermore, it highlights that gravitationally unstable discs are not just important for forming gas giants quickly, it can also rapidly form Earth mass bodies.

History

Author affiliation

School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Volume

528

Issue

2

Pagination

2490-2500

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP) for Royal Astronomical Society

issn

0035-8711

eissn

1365-2966

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-02-06

Language

en

Data Access Statement

The data from the simulations used to create all plots in this article is available on reasonable request to the corresponding author. The software used to create and visualize the simulations are publicly available: PHANTOMhttps://github.com/danieljprice/phantom (Price et al. 2018) SPLASHhttps://github.com/danieljprice/splash (Price 2007) SARRACENhttps://github.com/ttricco/sarracen (Harris & Tricco 2023)

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