Gap formation by planets in turbulent protostellar disks

The processes of planet formation and migration depend intimately on the interaction between planetesimals and the gaseous disks in which they form. The formation of gaps in the disk can severely limit the mass of the planet and its migration toward the protostar. We investigate the process of gap f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Winters, W, Balbus, SA, Hawley, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Institute of Physics Publishing 2003
Description
Summary:The processes of planet formation and migration depend intimately on the interaction between planetesimals and the gaseous disks in which they form. The formation of gaps in the disk can severely limit the mass of the planet and its migration toward the protostar. We investigate the process of gap formation through magnetohydrodynamic simulations in which internal stress arises self-consistently from turbulence generated by the magnetorotational instability. The simulations investigate three different planetary masses and two disk temperatures to bracket the tidal (thermal) and viscous gap opening conditions. The results are in general qualitative agreement with previous simulations of gap formation but show significant differences. In the presence of MHD turbulence, the gaps produced are shallower and asymmetrically wider than those produced with pure hydrodynamics. The rate of gap formation is also slowed, with accretion occurring across the developing gap. Viscous hydrodynamics does not adequately describe the evolution, however, because planets capable of producing gaps also may be capable of affecting the level of MHD turbulence in different regions of the disk.