Planet formation on the outer disk

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia Venturini

<p>In this talk I will review our current understanding of planet formation on the outer parts of the protoplanetary disk. We will address questions such as: what type of planetary compositions do we expect? What are the differences with planet formation in the inner disk? Is there a type of planet formation model (e.g pebble vs. planetesimal accretion) that provides a better match with observations? Are there observational trends that we cannot explain? What theoretical challenges do we still face? What new observational constraints will arise in the next years? </p>

2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (S345) ◽  
pp. 351-352
Author(s):  
Ernst A. Dorfi ◽  
Florian Ragossnig

AbstractDuring the early stages of planet formation accretion of small bodies add mass to the planet and deposit their energy kinetic energy. Caused by frictional heating and/or large stagnation pressures within the dense and extended atmospheres most of the in-falling bodies get destroyed by melting or break-up before they impact on the planet’s surface. The energy is added to the atmospheric layers rather than heating the planet directly. These processes can significantly alter the physical properties of protoplanets before they are exposed with their primordial atmospheres to the early stellar source when the protoplanetary disk becomes evaporated.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Mollière ◽  
Tamara Molyarova ◽  
Bertram Bitsch ◽  
Christian Eistrup ◽  
Remo Burn ◽  
...  

<p>With new and upcoming observing facilities (JWST and the ELTs), the exoplanet community is poised to precisely measure the chemical inventory of exoplanet atmospheres. This will allow, for the first time, to start investigating whether one of the greatest promises of atmospheric characterization studies holds up: inverting the atmospheric composition to infer the planet formation history encoded in it. In my talk, I will show how such measurements allow to run so-called formation retrievals, which constrain a planet’s formation history using its atmospheric abundances in a Bayesian retrieval framework. I will demonstrate how simple and popular models for the composition of the protoplanetary disk and planet formation could lead to interesting insights when applied in formation retrievals. At the same time, I will discuss how such assumptions are too strongly simplified for making the exoplanet atmosphere — formation connection in practice, and what the most pressing theoretical challenges are. Achieving this connection will be a formidable and interdisciplinary challenge, but the exciting exoplanet observations that lie ahead will allow the community to tackle it in earnest.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamad Ali-Dib ◽  
Andrew Cumming ◽  
Doug Lin

<p>Super-Earths are by far the most dominant type of exoplanet, yet their formation is<br />still not well understood. In particular, planet formation models predict that many<br />of them should have accreted enough gas to become gas giants. Here we examine the<br />role of the protoplanetary disk in the cooling and contraction of the protoplanetary<br />envelope. In particular, we investigate the effects of 1) the thermal state of the disk as<br />set by the relative size of heating by accretion or irradiation, and whether its energy is<br />transported by radiation or convection, and 2) advection of entropy into the outer envelope by disk flows that penetrate the Hill sphere, as found in 3D global simulations.<br />We find that, at 0.1 AU, the envelope quickly becomes fully radiative, nearly isothermal, and thus cannot cool down, stalling gas accretion. This<br />effect is significantly more pronounced in convective disks, leading to envelope mass or-<br />ders of magnitude lower. Entropy advection at 0.1 AU in either radiative or convective<br />disks could therefore explain why super-Earths failed to undergo runaway accretion.</p> <p>Ali-Dib, Cumming, & Lin (MNRAS 2020)</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-55
Author(s):  
Péter Futó ◽  
József Vanyó ◽  
Irakli Simonia ◽  
János Sztakovics ◽  
Mihály Nagy ◽  
...  

Abstract Kaba meteorite as a reference material (one of a least metamorphosed and most primitive carbonaceous chondrites fell on Earth) was chosen for this study providing an adequate background for study of the protoplanetary disk or even the crystallization processes of the Early Solar System. Its olivine minerals (forsterite and fayalite) and their Mg/Fe ratio can help us to understand more about the planet formation mechanism and whether or not the metallic constitutes of the disk could be precursors for the type of planets in the Solar System. A multiple methodological approach such as a combination of the scanning electron microscope, optical microscope, Raman spectroscopy and electron microprobe of the olivine grains give the Fe/Mg ratio database. The analyses above confirmed that planet formation in the protoplanetary disk is driven by the mineralogical precursors of the crystallization process. On the other hand, four nebulae mentioned in this study provide the astronomical data confirming that the planet formation in the protoplanetary disk is dominated or even driven by the metallic constituents.


2021 ◽  
Vol 653 ◽  
pp. L5
Author(s):  
N. T. Phuong ◽  
A. Dutrey ◽  
E. Chapillon ◽  
S. Guilloteau ◽  
J. Bary ◽  
...  

Context. Molecular line surveys are among the main tools to probe the structure and physical conditions in protoplanetary disks (PPDs), the birthplace of planets. The large radial and vertical temperature as well as density gradients in these PPDs lead to a complex chemical composition, making chemistry an important step to understand the variety of planetary systems. Aims. We aimed to study the chemical content of the protoplanetary disk surrounding GG Tau A, a well-known triple T Tauri system. Methods. We used NOEMA with the new correlator PolyFix to observe rotational lines at ∼2.6 to 4 mm from a few dozen molecules. We analysed the data with a radiative transfer code to derive molecular densities and the abundance relative to 13CO, which we compare to those of the TMC1 cloud and LkCa 15 disk. Results. We report the first detection of CCS in PPDs. We also marginally detect OCS and find 16 other molecules in the GG Tauri outer disk. Ten of them had been found previously, while seven others (13CN, N2H+, HNC, DNC, HC3N, CCS, and C34S) are new detections in this disk. Conclusions. The analysis confirms that sulphur chemistry is not yet properly understood. The D/H ratio, derived from DCO+/HCO+, DCN/HCN, and DNC/HNC ratios, points towards a low temperature chemistry. The detection of the rare species CCS confirms that GG Tau is a good laboratory to study the protoplanetary disk chemistry, thanks to its large disk size and mass.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (S350) ◽  
pp. 181-186
Author(s):  
Richard Teague

AbstractUnderstanding the physical structure of the planet formation environment, the protoplanetary disk, is essential for the interpretation of high resolution observations of the dust and future observations of the magnetic field structure. Observations of multiple transitions of molecular species offers a unique view of the underlying physical structure through excitation analyses. Here we describe a new method to extract high-resolution spectra from low-resolution observations, then provide two case studies of how molecular excitation analyses were used to constrain the physical structure in TW Hya, the closest protoplanetary disk to Earth.


2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (S310) ◽  
pp. 218-219
Author(s):  
M. P. Ronco ◽  
G. C. de Elía ◽  
O. M. Guilera

AbstractIn general, most of the studies of terrestrial-type planet formation typically use ad hoc initial conditions. In this work we improved the initial conditions described in Ronco & de Elía (2014) starting with a semi-analytical model wich simulates the evolution of the protoplanetary disk during the gas phase. The results of the semi-analytical model are then used as initial conditions for the N-body simulations. We show that the planetary systems considered are not sensitive to the particular initial distribution of embryos and planetesimals and thus, the results are globally similar to those found in the previous work.


2010 ◽  
Vol 723 (2) ◽  
pp. L243-L247 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Bouwman ◽  
W. A. Lawson ◽  
A. Juhász ◽  
C. Dominik ◽  
E. D. Feigelson ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linda Podio ◽  
Antonio Garufi ◽  
Claudio Codella ◽  
Davide Fedele ◽  
Kazi Rygl ◽  
...  

<p>How have planets formed in the Solar System? And what chemical composition they inherited from their natal environment? Is the chemical composition passed unaltered from the earliest stages of the formation of the Sun to its disk and then to the planets which assembled in the disk? Or does it reflects chemical processes occurring in the disk and/or during the planet formation process? And what was the role of comets in the delivery of volatiles and prebiotic compounds to early Earth?</p> <p>A viable way to answer these questions is to observe protoplanetary disks around young Sun-like stars and compare their chemical composition with that of the early Solar System, which is imprinted in comets. The impacting images recently obtained by millimetre arrays of antennas such as ALMA provided the first observational evidence of ongoing planet formation in 0.1-1 million years old disks, through rings and gaps in their dust and gas distribution. The chemical composition of the forming planets and small bodies clearly depends on the location and timescale for their formation and is intimately connected to the spatial distribution and abundance of the various molecular species in the disk. The chemical characterisation of disks is therefore crucial.</p> <p>This field, however, is still in its infancy, because of the small sizes of disks (~100 au) and to the low gas-phase abundance of molecules (abundances with respect to H<sub>2</sub> down to 10<sup>-12</sup>), which requires an unprecedented combination of angular resolution and sensitivity. I will show the first pioneering results obtained as part of the ALMA chemical survey of protoplanetary disks in the Taurus star forming region (ALMA-DOT program). Thanks to the ALMA images at ~20 au resolution, we recovered the radial distribution and abundance of diatomic molecules (CO and CN), S-bearing molecules (CS, SO, SO<sub>2</sub>, H<sub>2</sub>CS), as well as simple organics (H<sub>2</sub>CO and CH<sub>3</sub>OH) which are key for the formation of prebiotic compounds. Enhanced H<sub>2</sub>CO emission in the cold outer disk, outside the CO snowline, suggests that organic molecules may be efficiently formed in disks on the icy mantles of dust grain. This could be the dawn of ice chemistry in the disk, producing ices rich of complex organic molecules (COMs) which could be incorporated by the bodies forming in the outer disk region, such as comets.<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span></p> <p>The next step is the comparison of the molecules radial distribution and abundance in disks with the chemical composition of comets, which are the leftover building blocks of giant planet cores and other planetary bodies. The first pioneering results in this direction have been obtained thanks to the ESA’s <em>Rosetta </em>mission, which allowed obtaining in situ measurements of the COMs abundance on the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. The comparison with three protostellar solar analogs observed on Solar System scales has shown comparable COMs abundance, implying that the volatile composition of comets and planetesimals may be partially inherited from the protostellar stage. The advent of new mission, devoted to sample return such as AMBITION will allow us to do a step ahead in this direction.</p> <p> </p>


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