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Rapid Formation of Jupiter and Wide-orbit Exoplanets in Disks with Pressure Bumps

Astrophysical Journal, ISSN: 1538-4357, Vol: 914, Issue: 2
2021
  • 26
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 14
    Captures
  • 0
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    26
    • Citation Indexes
      26
  • Captures
    14

Article Description

The formation of gas-giant planets within the lifetime of a protoplanetary disk is challenging especially far from a star. A promising model for the rapid formation of giant-planet cores is pebble accretion in which gas drag during encounters leads to high accretion rates. Most models of pebble accretion consider disks with a monotonic, radial pressure profile. This causes a continuous inward flux of pebbles and inefficient growth. Here we examine planet formation in a disk with multiple, intrinsic pressure bumps. In the outer disk, pebbles become trapped near these bumps allowing rapid growth under suitable conditions. In the inner disk, pebble traps may not exist because the inward gas advection velocity is too high. Pebbles here are rapidly removed. In the outer disk, growth is very sensitive to the initial planet mass and the strength of turbulence. This is because turbulent density fluctuations raise planetary eccentricities, increasing the planet-pebble relative velocity. Planetary seeds above a distance-dependent critical mass grow to a Jupiter mass in 0.5-3 Myr out to at least 60 au in a 0.03 solar-mass disk. Smaller bodies remain near their initial mass, leading to a sharp dichotomy in growth outcomes. For turbulent α = 1e-4, the critical masses are 1e-4M ⊕ and 1e-3M ⊕ at 9 and 75 au, respectively. Pressure bumps in disks may explain the large mass difference between the giant planets and Kuiper Belt objects, and also the existence of wide-orbit planets in some systems.

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