PlanetMigration: InwardorOutward? Eduardo J. Delgado-Donate Pawel Artymowicz Stockholm Observatory PlanetMigration:InwardorOutward? I. Why Migration? - As of 10/09/2004, 128 planets in 112 planetary systems - Significant fraction are Jupiter sized at close distances: ≈ 67/128 closer than 1 AU - Current theories ➠ gas giants forming at 5 AU ↓ Planets must move (migrate) inward & best candidate for pushing ➠ circumstellar gas disc [Lin & Papaloizou 1979] Delgado & Artymowicz, JENAM 2004, Granada PlanetMigration:InwardorOutward? II. Type I Migration - Applies to small planets 100 Mŷ - At Lindblad resonances (LR) planet launches tidal waves propagating outward from corotation. [ Goldreich & Tremaine 1979, 1980; Artymowicz 1992, 1993] - Outer disc receives angular momentum, inner disc loses angular momentum. - Net result is that outer disc dominates. ↓ Planet drifts inward (in e.g. 10⁵ years) [ Ward 1986, 1997] Delgado & Artymowicz, JENAM 2004, Granada PlanetMigration:InwardorOutward? III. Type II Migration - Gas giants (M M♃) have Roche lobe ≳ disc scale height ↓ open gap - Gas flows uneasily through gap and planet becomes effectively locked to disc kinematics ↓ planet drift inward in viscous timescale (e.g. 10⁶ yr) [Ward 1977] Delgado & Artymowicz, JENAM 2004, Granada PlanetMigration:InwardorOutward? IV. Type III Migration: Corotation Resonances (CR) win - LRs win in standard 1st order perturbation theory [e.g.Tanaka,Takeuchi & Ward 2000] - However, change in fluid trajectories in CR region are not infinitesimal [Masset & Papaloizou 2003; Artymowicz 2003] - Toy model : exchange of momentum in Hill’s equations: x” - 2y’ = [ 3 - (m₂/m₁) R/R⁴] x y” + 2x’ = - (m₂/m₁) (yR/R⁴) with some modifications...[Artymowicz 2003] Delgado & Artymowicz, JENAM 2004, Granada PlanetMigration:InwardorOutward? V. CR Torques Solution to modified Hill’s eqns: In a symmetric situation there is no net torque BUT... Delgado & Artymowicz, JENAM 2004, Granada PlanetMigration:InwardorOutward? Delgado & Artymowicz, JENAM 2004, Granada PlanetMigration:InwardorOutward? - If there is initial asymmetry in density distr. → torques will make planet move - If density gradient is positive outward locally (e.g. inner edge) → planet will migrate outward - As planet moves, underdense region appears material moves in and planet out dense - Migration engine runs on vacuum - It’s fast as CR region is closer to planet than LR sites (e.g. 10⁴ yr ?) Delgado & Artymowicz, JENAM 2004, Granada PlanetMigration:InwardorOutward? VI. Numerical Simulations Corotation torques need to be studied with numerical simulations, e.g: Miguel de Val-Borro poster 4.13 ➪ + more sophisticated analytical models http://www.astro.su.se/English/groups/planets/systems.html Delgado & Artymowicz, JENAM 2004, Granada PlanetMigration:InwardorOutward? Conclusions - Corotation torques may have an effect on planet migration after all. - Given the appropriate initial conditions, a planet can migrate outward - This type III migration is fast! - We need much better theory for it: numerical calculations + analytical models → how fast? how large is CR region? dependence on planet mass? Delgado & Artymowicz, JENAM 2004, Granada
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