4.6 Article

Fluffy dust forms icy planetesimals by static compression

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 557, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201322151

Keywords

planets and satellites: formation; methods: analytical; protoplanetary disks

Funding

  1. JSPS for Young Scientists [24.2120]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [25400453, 24540459, 23103005, 23103004] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Context. Several barriers have been proposed in planetesimal formation theory: bouncing, fragmentation, and radial drift problems. Understanding the structure evolution of dust aggregates is a key in planetesimal formation. Dust grains become fluffy by coagulation in protoplanetary disks. However, once they are fluffy, they are not sufficiently compressed by collisional compression to form compact planetesimals. Aims. We aim to reveal the pathway of dust structure evolution from dust grains to compact planetesimals. Methods. Using the compressive strength formula, we analytically investigate how fluffy dust aggregates are compressed by static compression due to ram pressure of the disk gas and self-gravity of the aggregates in protoplanetary disks. Results. We reveal the pathway of the porosity evolution from dust grains via fluffy aggregates to form planetesimals, circumventing the barriers in planetesimal formation. The aggregates are compressed by the disk gas to a density of 10(-3) g/cm(3) in coagulation, which is more compact than is the case with collisional compression. Then, they are compressed more by self-gravity to 10(-1) g/cm(3) when the radius is 10 km. Although the gas compression decelerates the growth, the aggregates grow rapidly enough to avoid the radial drift barrier when the orbital radius is less than or similar to 6 AU in a typical disk. Conclusions. We propose a fluffy dust growth scenario from grains to planetesimals. It enables icy planetesimal formation in a wide range beyond the snowline in protoplanetary disks. This result proposes a concrete initial condition of planetesimals for the later stages of the planet formation.

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