论文标题
探测各种迁移和气体积聚率对卵石积聚场景中巨型行星形成的影响
Probing the impact of varied migration and gas accretion rates for the formation of giant planets in the pebble accretion scenario
论文作者
论文摘要
生长行星的最终轨道位置取决于它们的迁移速度,这基本上是由行星质量设定的。小型质量行星以I型迁移迁移,而更大的行星则以II型迁移为单位,这主要取决于光盘的粘性演化速率。行星在达到II型迁移之前最容易受到内向迁移的影响,并且在此阶段可能会损失其半高轴的很大一部分。我们调查了不同的圆盘粘度,马蹄形区域内的动力扭矩和气体积聚的影响,作为减慢行星迁移的机制。我们的研究证实,由于较早的差距开口和II型迁移率较慢,在低粘度环境中生长的行星迁移较少。我们发现,从马蹄形区域中考虑煤气积聚允许较早的缝隙开口,这导致行星不断增长的内向迁移。此外,与不从马蹄形区域获得气体积聚作用的模拟相比,这种作用增加了行星质量。此外,将动力扭矩的效果与马蹄形区域的气体积聚作用相结合,大大减慢了向内的迁移。考虑到这些效果,与以前没有考虑到这些效果的模拟相比,与以前的模拟相比,靠近水冰线区域的冷木星(a> 1 au)形成。因此,我们得出的结论是,从马蹄形区域内的气体积聚以及动态扭矩在塑造行星系统中起着至关重要的作用。
The final orbital position of growing planets is determined by their migration speed, which is essentially set by the planetary mass. Small mass planets migrate in type I migration, while more massive planets migrate in type II migration, which is thought to depend mostly on the viscous evolution rate of the disc. A planet is most vulnerable to inward migration before it reaches type II migration and can lose a significant fraction of its semi-major axis at this stage. We investigated the influence of different disc viscosities, the dynamical torque and gas accretion from within the horseshoe region as mechanisms for slowing down planet migration. Our study confirms that planets growing in low viscosity environments migrate less, due to the earlier gap opening and slower type II migration rate. We find that taking the gas accretion from the horseshoe region into account allows an earlier gap opening and this results in less inward migration of growing planets. Furthermore, this effect increases the planetary mass compared to simulations that do not take the effect of gas accretion from the horseshoe region. Moreover, combining the effect of the dynamical torque with the effect of gas accretion from the horseshoe region, significantly slows down inward migration. Taking these effects into account could allow the formation of cold Jupiters (a > 1 au) closer to the water ice line region compared to previous simulations that did not take these effects into account. We thus conclude that gas accretion from within the horseshoe region and the dynamical torque play crucial roles in shaping planetary systems.