4.6 Article

Migration and giant planet formation

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 417, Issue 1, Pages L25-L28

Publisher

E D P SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20040053

Keywords

stars : planetary systems; stars : planetary systems : formation; solar system : formation

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We extend the core-accretion model of giant gaseous planets by Pollack et al. (1996) to include migration, disc evolution and gap formation. Starting with a core of a fraction of an Earth's mass located at 8 AU, we end Our simulation with the onset of runaway gas accretion when the planet is at 5.5 AU 1 Myr later. This timescale is about a factor ten shorter than the one found by Pollack et al. (1996) even though the disc was less massive initially and viscously evolving. Other initial conditions can lead to even shorter timescales. The reason for this speed-up is found to result from the fact that a moving planet does not deplete its feeding zone to the extend of a static planet. Thus, the uncomfortably long formation timescale associated with the core-accretion scenario can be considerably reduced and brought in much better agreement with the typical disc lifetimes inferred from observations of young circumstellar discs.

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