English

Iceline Variations Driven by Protoplanetary Disc Gaps

Earth and Planetary Astrophysics 2023-09-18 v2

Abstract

The composition of forming planets is strongly affected by the protoplanetary disc's thermal structure. This thermal structure is predominantly set by dust radiative transfer and viscous (accretional) heating and can be impacted by gaps - regions of low dust and gas density that can occur when planets form. The effect of variations in dust surface density on disc temperature has been poorly understood until now. In this work, we use the radiative transfer code MCMax to model the 2D dust thermal structure with individual gaps corresponding to planets with masses of 0.1 MJ_J - 5 MJ_J and orbital radii of 3, 5, and 10 AU. Low dust opacity in the gap allows radiation to penetrate deeper into the disc and warm the midplane by up to 16 K, but only for gaps located in the region of the disc where stellar irradiation is the dominant source of heat (here, a\gtrsim4 AU). In viscously-heated regions (a\lesssim4 AU), the midplane of the gap is relatively cooler by up to 100 K. Outside of the gap, broad radial oscillations in heating and cooling are present due to changes in disc flaring. These thermal features affect local segregation of volatile elements (H2_2O, CH4_4, CO2, CO) between the dust and gas. We find that icelines experience dramatic shifts relative to gapless models: up to 6.5 AU towards the star and 4.3 AU towards the midplane. While quantitative predictions of iceline deviations will require more sophisticated models which include transport and sublimation/condensation kinetics, our results provide evidence that planet-induced iceline variations represent a potential feedback from the planet onto the composition of material it is accreting.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2204.11555,
  title  = {Iceline Variations Driven by Protoplanetary Disc Gaps},
  author = {Madelyn Broome and Oliver Shorttle and Mihkel Kama and Richard A. Booth},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2204.11555},
  year   = {2023}
}

Comments

11 pages, 5 figures. Accepted to MNRAS, published 20 April 2023

R2 v1 2026-06-24T10:57:36.407Z