Title of article :
Accretion of terrestrial planets from oligarchs in a turbulent disk
Author/Authors :
Ogihara، نويسنده , , Masahiro and Ida، نويسنده , , Shigeru and Morbidelli، نويسنده , , Alessandro، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
13
From page :
522
To page :
534
Abstract :
We have investigated the final accretion stage of terrestrial planets from Mars-mass protoplanets that formed through oligarchic growth in a disk comparable to the minimum mass solar nebula (MMSN), through N-body simulation including random torques exerted by disk turbulence due to Magneto-Rotational Instability. For the torques, we used the semi-analytical formula developed by Laughlin et al. [Laughlin, G., Steinacker, A., Adams, F.C., 2004. Astrophys. J. 608, 489–496]. The damping of orbital eccentricities (in all runs) and type-I migration (in some runs) due to the tidal interactions with disk gas is also included. Without any effect of disk gas, Earth-mass planets are formed in terrestrial planet regions in a disk comparable to MMSN but with too large orbital eccentricities to be consistent with the present eccentricities of Earth and Venus in our Solar System. With the eccentricity damping caused by the tidal interaction with a remnant gas disk, Earth-mass planets with eccentricities consistent with those of Earth and Venus are formed in a limited range of disk gas surface density (∼10−4 times MMSN). However, in this case, on average, too many (≳6) planets remain in terrestrial planet regions, because the damping leads to isolation between the planets. We have carried out a series of N-body simulations including the random torques with different disk surface density and strength of turbulence. We found that the orbital eccentricities pumped up by the turbulent torques and associated random walks in semimajor axes tend to delay isolation of planets, resulting in more coagulation of planets. The eccentricities are still damped after planets become isolated. As a result, the number of final planets decreases with increase in strength of the turbulence, while Earth-mass planets with small eccentricities are still formed. In the case of relatively strong turbulence, the number of final planets are 4–5 at 0.5–2 AU, which is more consistent with Solar System, for relatively wide range of disk gas surface density ( ∼ 10 −4 – 10 −2 times MMSN).
Keywords :
accretion , Planetary formation , Planet–disk interactions , disks , Terrestrial planets
Journal title :
Icarus
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Icarus
Record number :
2375307
Link To Document :
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