论文标题
保留长周期气体巨型行星:重新审视II型迁移
Retention of Long-Period Gas Giant Planets: Type II Migration Revisited
论文作者
论文摘要
在它们的形成过程中,新兴的原始星et与其出生磁盘相互作用。原始瓦斯巨型行星的半径比磁盘厚度大,轨道附近的张开间隙和淬火气流。通常假定它们的II型迁移与磁盘的粘性演变耦合。尽管该假设为近距离行星的起源提供了解释,但它也遇到了对大多数天然气巨型行星的长期轨道保留的困境。此外,数值模拟表明,行星迁移不仅是由其出生磁盘的粘性扩散确定的。在这里,我们进行了一系列流体动力模拟,并结合了分析研究,以检查II型迁移的不同范式之间的过渡。我们发现一系列行星质量,气体继续流过严重耗尽的间隙,从而使磁盘区域的表面密度分布以超出间隙的状态保持在准稳态状态。关联的间隙曲线修改了旋转\&lindblad共振的位置。在行星轨道的接近度中,高阶lindblad \&Colotation扭矩因间隙的气体耗竭而减弱,而间隙壁附近的低阶lindblad扭矩则保持其幅度。因此,磁盘的固有表面密度分布决定了行星II型迁移的速度和方向。我们表明,这种效果可能会使巨型行星的内向迁移停滞不前,并将其保存在表面密度陡峭的磁盘区域。
During their formation, emerging protoplanets tidally interact with their natal disks. Proto-gas-giant planets, with Hills radius larger than the disk thickness, open gaps and quench gas flow in the vicinity of their orbits. It is usually assumed that their type II migration is coupled to the viscous evolution of the disk. Although this hypothesis provides an explanation for the origin of close-in planets, it also encounter predicament on the retention of long-period orbits for most gas giant planets. Moreover, numerical simulations indicate that planets migrations are not solely determined by the viscous diffusion of their natal disk. Here we carry out a series of hydrodynamic simulations combined with analytic studies to examine the transition between different paradigms of type II migration. We find a range of planetary mass for which gas continues to flow through a severely depleted gap so that the surface density distribution in the disk region beyond the gap is maintained in a quasi-steady state. The associated gap profile modifies the location of corotation \& Lindblad resonances. In the proximity of the planet's orbit, high-order Lindblad \& corotation torque are weakened by the gas depletion in the gap while low-order Lindblad torques near the gap walls preserves their magnitude. Consequently, the intrinsic surface density distribution of the disk determines delicately both pace and direction of planets' type II migration. We show that this effect might stall the inward migration of giant planets and preserve them in disk regions where the surface density is steep.