4.6 Article

Planet migration in three-dimensional radiative discs

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 506, Issue 2, Pages 971-987

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/200912072

Keywords

accretion, accretion disks; hydrodynamics; radiative transfer; planets and satellites: formation

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Context. The migration of growing protoplanets depends on the thermodynamics of the ambient disc. Standard modelling, using locally isothermal discs, indicate an inward (type-I) migration in the low planet mass regime. Taking non-isothermal effects into account, recent studies have shown that the direction of the type-I migration can change from inward to outward. Aims. In this paper we extend previous two-dimensional studies and investigate the planet-disc interaction in viscous, radiative discs using fully three-dimensional radiation hydrodynamical simulations of protoplanetary accretion discs with embedded planets, for a range of planetary masses. Methods. We use an explicit three-dimensional (3D) hydrodynamical code NIRVANA that includes full tensor viscosity. We have added implicit radiation transport in the flux-limited diffusion approximation, and to speed up the simulations significantly we have newly adapted and implemented the FARGO-algorithm in a 3D context. Results. First, we present results of test simulations that demonstrate the accuracy of the newly implemented FARGO-method in 3D. For a planet mass of 20 M-earth, we then show that including radiative effects also yields a torque reversal in full 3D. For the same opacity law, the effect is even stronger in 3D than in the corresponding 2D simulations, due to a slightly thinner disc. Finally, we demonstrate the extent of the torque reversal by calculating a sequence of planet masses. Conclusions. Through full 3D simulations of embedded planets in viscous, radiative discs, we confirm that the migration can be directed outwards up to planet masses of about 33 M-earth. As a result, the effect may help to resolve the problem of inward migration of planets that is too rapid during their type-I phase.

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