Migration of low-mass planets in inviscid discs: the effect of radiation transport on the dynamical corotation torque

Author:

Ziampras Alexandros1ORCID,Nelson Richard P1,Paardekooper Sijme-Jan12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Astronomy Unit, School of Physics and Astronomy, Queen Mary University of London , London E1 4NS , UK

2. Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, Delft University of Technology , Kluyverweg 1, NL-2600 AA Delft , the Netherlands

Abstract

ABSTRACT Low-mass planets migrate in the type-I regime. In the inviscid limit, the contrast between the vortensity trapped inside the planet’s corotating region and the background disc vortensity leads to a dynamical corotation torque, which is thought to slow down inward migration. We investigate the effect of radiative cooling on low-mass planet migration using inviscid 2D hydrodynamical simulations. We find that cooling induces a baroclinic forcing on material U-turning near the planet, resulting in vortensity growth in the corotating region, which in turn weakens the dynamical corotation torque and leads to 2–3× faster inward migration. This mechanism is most efficient when cooling acts on a time-scale similar to the U-turn time of material inside the corotating region, but is none the less relevant for a substantial radial range in a typical disc (R ∼ 5–50 au). As the planet migrates inwards, the contrast between the vortensity inside and outside the corotating region increases and partially regulates the effect of baroclinic forcing. As a secondary effect, we show that radiative damping can further weaken the vortensity barrier created by the planet’s spiral shocks, supporting inward migration. Finally, we highlight that a self-consistent treatment of radiative diffusion as opposed to local cooling is critical in order to avoid overestimating the vortensity growth and the resulting migration rate.

Funder

STFC

Leverhulme Trust

European Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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