Combined Effects of Disk Winds and Turbulence-Driven Accretion on Planet Populations
Abstract
Recent surveys show that protoplanetary disks have lower levels of turbulence
than expected based on their observed accretion rates. A viable solution to
this is that magnetized disk winds dominate angular momentum transport. This
has several important implications for planet formation processes. We compute
the physical and chemical evolution of disks and the formation and migration of
planets under the combined effects of angular momentum transport by turbulent
viscosity and disk winds. We take into account the critical role of planet
traps to limit Type I migration in all of these models and compute thousands of
planet evolution tracks for single planets drawn from a distribution of initial
disk properties and turbulence strengths. We do not consider multi-planet
models nor include N-body planet-planet interactions. Within this physical
framework we find that populations with a constant value disk turbulence and
winds strength produce mass-semimajor axis distributions in the M-a diagram
with insufficient scatter to compare reasonably with observations. However,
populations produced as a consequence of sampling disks with a distribution of
the relative strengths of disk turbulence and winds fit much better. Such
models give rise to a substantial super Earth population at orbital radii
0.03-2 AU, as well as a clear separation between the produced hot Jupiter and
warm Jupiter populations. Additionally, this model results in a good comparison
with the exoplanetary mass-radius distribution in the M-R diagram after
post-disk atmospheric photoevaporation is accounted for.