Turbulent Disk Viscosity and the Bifurcation of Planet Formation Histories
Abstract
ALMA observations of dust ring/gap structures in a minority but growing
sample of protoplanetary disks can be explained by the presence of planets at
large disk radii - yet the origins of these planets remains debated. We perform
planet formation simulations using a semi-analytic model of the HL Tau disk to
follow the growth and migration of hundreds of planetary embryos initially
distributed throughout the disk, assuming either a high or low turbulent
$\alpha$ viscosity. We have discovered that there is a bifurcation in the
migration history of forming planets as a consequence of varying the disk
viscosity. In our high viscosity disks, inward migration prevails and yields
compact planetary systems, tempered only by planet trapping at the water
iceline around 5 au. In our lower viscosity models however, low mass planets
can migrate outward to twice their initial orbital radii, driven by a radially
extended region of strong outward-directed corotation torques located near the
heat transition (where radiative heating of the disk by the star is comparable
to viscous heating) - before eventually migrating inwards. We derive analytic
expressions for the planet mass at which the corotation torque dominates, and
find that this "corotation mass" scales as $M_{\rm p, corot} \sim
\alpha^{2/3}$. If disk winds dominate the corotation torque, the corotation
mass scales linearly with wind strength. We propose that the observed
bifurcation in disk demographics into a majority of compact dust disks and a
minority of extended ring/gap systems is a consequence of a distribution of
viscosity across the disk population.
Authors
Speedie J; Pudritz RE; Cridland AJ; Meru F; Booth RA