4.7 Article

ON THE POSSIBILITY OF ENRICHMENT AND DIFFERENTIATION IN GAS GIANTS DURING BIRTH BY DISK INSTABILITY

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 724, Issue 1, Pages 618-639

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/724/1/618

Keywords

planets and satellites: composition; planets and satellites: formation; planet-disk interactions; protoplanetary disks

Funding

  1. University of Florida
  2. NASA [NNX08AK36G]
  3. National Science Foundation [PHY05-51164]
  4. NASA [NNX08AK36G, 100052] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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We investigate the coupling between rock-size solids and gas during the formation of gas giant planets by disk fragmentation in the outer regions of massive disks. In this study, we use three-dimensional radiative hydrodynamic simulations and model solids as a spatial distribution of particles. We assume that half of the total solid fraction is in small grains and half in large solids. The former are perfectly entrained with the gas and set the opacity in the disk, while the latter are allowed to respond to gas drag forces, with the back reaction on the gas taken into account. To explore the maximum effects of gas-solid interactions, we first consider 10 cm size particles. We then compare these results to a simulation with 1 km size particles, which explores the low-drag regime. We show that (1) disk instability planets have the potential to form large cores due to aerodynamic capturing of rock-size solids in spiral arms before fragmentation; (2) temporary clumps can concentrate tens of M. of solids in very localized regions before clump disruption; (3) the formation of permanent clumps, even in the outer disk, is dependent on the grain-size distribution, i.e., the opacity; (4) nonaxisymmetric structure in the disk can create disk regions that have a solids-to-gas ratio greater than unity; (5) the solid distribution may affect the fragmentation process; (6) proto-gas giants and proto-brown dwarfs can start as differentiated objects prior to the H-2 collapse phase; (7) spiral arms in a gravitationally unstable disk are able to stop the inward drift of rock-size solids, even redistributing them to larger radii; and (8) large solids can form spiral arms that are offset from the gaseous spiral arms. We conclude that planet embryo formation can be strongly affected by the growth of solids during the earliest stages of disk accretion.

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