Gravitational Instabilities in Protoplanetary Disks - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 48
About This Presentation
Title:

Gravitational Instabilities in Protoplanetary Disks

Description:

Motivation: Gas Giant Planets. Pollack et al. 1996. 13. What Do GI's Do to Disks? ... PLANETS' FORMED. Boss 1998. 1MJ. 27. Gas Giants: Pickett et al. 2000 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:110
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 49
Provided by: richard179
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Gravitational Instabilities in Protoplanetary Disks


1
Gravitational Instabilities in Protoplanetary
Disks
  • Annie C. Mejía
  • Astronomy Department
  • Indiana University

2
Collaborators
  • Nuria Calvet
  • Harvard-Smithsonian
  • Pat Cassen
  • NASA-Ames Research Center
  • Richard H. Durisen
  • Indiana University
  • Tom Hartquist
  • University of Leeds
  • Brian K. Pickett
  • Purdue University Calumet
  • John Rosheck
  • Indiana University
  • Dotty Woolum
  • Cal State Fullerton

3
MOTIVATIONS
4
Motivations YSO Disks
  • Prevalence of Disks Around YSOs
  • 50 of young stars have disks
  • Disks last 106 - 107 years
  • Measured masses range up to 10 the mass of the
    central star
  • Mass accretion rates

5
Proplyds in the Orion Nebula
2.5 light-years
5
5
6
6
6
7
Motivation Disk Variability
8
Motivation Disk Variability
Infalling envelope
Wind
Disk
Accretion columns
Hartmann 1998
9
Motivation Disk Variability
Hartmann 1998
10
Motivation Disk Structure
HST
11
Motivation Gas Giant Planets
  • Gas Giant Planets are Hard to Form
  • They must form while there is H He, i.e., in
    106 - 107 years
  • Core-accretion takes too long for Saturn, Uranus,
    Neptune
  • Gap-clearing should limit
  • Jovians to only a few MJ

12
Motivation Gas Giant Planets
Pollack et al. 1996
13
What Do GIs Do to Disks?
  • When Disk Self-Gravity is Strong
  • Can GIs in disks produce permanent bound
    objects?
  • Can GIs play an important role in causing inward
    mass transport?
  • What are the observable consequences?

14
EARLIER STUDIES
15
Earlier Studies Toomre (1964)
  • Gravitational stability of disks
  • Measured by
  • Q cs?/?G?
  • Cs speed of sound, ? epicyclic frequency,
  • G gravitational constant, ? surface density
  • for Q
  • for Q

16
Earlier Studies Tomley et al. (1991, 1994)
  • Thermal energetics are critical
  • Cooling (Q ?)
  • sustains spirals transport
  • makes clumps if strong
  • Heating (Q ?)
  • suppresses instability
  • Problem
  • done with a 2D particle code

17
Earlier Studies Tomley et al. (1991, 1994)
Low Cooling Rate
High Cooling Rate
18
METHODOLOGY
19
Methodology Equilibrium
  • How to Make a Star/Disk Model
  • Self-consistent field method
  • Hachisu 1987
  • Force Balance ? Potential
  • Polytropic EOS P ??
  • Md/M?, Rd/R?, ?(r) r-p
  • With or without the star

20
Methodology Equilibrium
Md/M?1/7, Rd/R20?, ?(r) r-1/2
Star
Disk
Pickett, Mejia, Durisen 2002
21
Methodology 3D Hydro
  • Numerical Characteristics
  • 2nd order in space and time
  • Explicit and Eulerian
  • Fixed cylindrical grid (r,?,z)
  • (128,64,16) to (512,256,64)
  • 105 to 8x106 cells
  • Run in parallel on a SUN E10000

r 512
? 256
z 64
22
Methodology 3D Hydro
  • Physics Included
  • EOS
  • locally isothermal
  • locally isentropic
  • adiabatic
  • with or without bulk viscosity
  • Cassen Woolum
  • DAlessio Calvet

Green implemented Red in progress
23
Methodology 3D Hydro
  • Physics Included
  • Heating
  • artificial bulk viscosity (shock heating)
  • alpha-type shear viscosity
  • Cooling
  • volumetric cooling (const. tcool)
  • Eddington grey approximation
  • radiative diffusion

Green implemented Red in progress
24
Methodology Unique or Unusual
  • Full 3D
  • Most other GI studies have been thin disk (2D)
    treatments
  • Inner Boundary Conditions
  • Can include the star
  • No reflective boundaries
  • Full Physics
  • Heating cooling, EOS

25
THE FORMATION OF GAS GIANT PLANETS?
26
Gas Giants Boss 1998
Solar Nebula Model R 10 AU
Md/M? 0.1 M? 1M? Q outer region Disk
expansion not allowed
Locally isothermal PLANETS FORMED
?6MJ
1MJ?
Boss 1998
27
Gas Giants Pickett et al. 2000
Similar Solar Nebula Model Isothermal Evolution
Restricted Expansion
Unrestricted Expansion
30MJ?
Pickett, Durisen, Cassen, Mejia 2000
28
Gas Giants Boss 2000
Similar Solar Nebula Model Isothermal Evolution
Restricted Expansion
Unrestricted Expansion
Boss 2000
29
Gas Giants Boss 2000
High Resolution Isothermal Evolution Persistent
Dense Clump Forms
5MJ?
Boss 2000
30
Gas Giants Pickett et al. 2002
Our Best Isothermal Evolutions
fmax 64
fmax 128
No Persistent Clumps Form
fmax 128
fmax 256
Pickett, Mejía, Durisen 2002
31
HEATING COOLING
32
Heating Cooling Pickett et al.
Isothermal
Shock Heating
Many Dense Transient Clumps
No Dense Clumps
Pickett, Durisen, Cassen, Mejía 2000
33
Heating Cooling Nelson et al.
Isothermal
Heating Cooling
Many Dense Clumps
No Dense Clumps
Nelson, Benz, Ruzmaikina 2000
34
Heating Cooling Boss
Radiative Cooling
With Pseudo-Heating
Many Dense Clumps
No Dense Clumps
Boss 2001
35
Heating Cooling Mejía et al.
Initial Model For Full Physics Simulations
R 40 AU Md/M 0.7 M 0.5M?
Mejía, Durisen, Pickett, Calvet 2002
36
3.48 ORPs
4.01 ORPs
4.44 ORPs
7.46 ORPs
Tcool 2 ORPs Plus Shock Heating
170.6 AU
ORP Outer Rotation Period 250 yr
Pickett, Mejía, Durisen 2002
37
3.48 ORPs
4.01ORPs
4.44 ORPs
Tcool 2 ORPs Plus Shock Heating
10.7 AU
84.6 AU
7.46 ORPs
Pickett, Mejía, Durisen 2002
38
Heating Cooling Mejía et al.
4.46 ORPs
Radiative Cooling (Eddington approx. grey
atm.) Plus Shock Heating
170.6 AU
DAlessio et al. opacities
Mejía, Durisen, Pickett, Calvet 2002
39
Heating Cooling Mejía et al.
? Radiative Cooling ?
? Tcool 2 ORPs
?
Mejía, Durisen, Pickett, Calvet 2002
40
Heating Cooling Mejía et al.
Radiative Cooling
Shock Heating
6.5 ORPs
Density
41
Heating Cooling Methanol Masers
2000 AU
Durisen, Mejia, Pickett, Hartquist 2001
Massive Protostars sometimes show linear
distributions of methanol (CH3OH) masers.
42
Heating Cooling Methanol Masers
2000 AU
Durisen, Mejia, Pickett, Hartquist 2001
Massive Protostars sometimes show linear
distributions of methanol (CH3OH) masers.
These could be due to the central star
illuminating spiral ridges caused by GIs.
43
CONCLUSIONS
44
Conclusions
  • Can GIs in Disks Produce Permanent Bound
    Objects?
  • MAYBE
  • requires dominance of strong cooling
  • and/or a thermal physics boundary
  • shock heating tends to suppress it
  • Future efforts
  • adaptive mesh techniques
  • more accurate treatments of heating and cooling

45
Conclusions
  • Can GIs Play an Important Role in Causing Inward
    Mass Transport?
  • DEFINITELY
  • violent restructuring when Q first becomes
  • persists later and inward at a lower level with
    continued cooling
  • Future efforts
  • stellar irradiation
  • alpha viscosity

46
Conclusions
  • What Are the Observable Consequences?
  • Disk variability
  • time-dependent spiral disk distortions
  • luminosity outbursts in the disk
  • accretion outbursts on the star
  • Masers
  • Future efforts
  • better radiation physics
  • ray tracing of stellar illumination

47
(No Transcript)
48
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com