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Gap formation in Young Circumstellar Disks due to Photoevaporation from the Central star

Gap formation in Young Circumstellar Disks due to Photoevaporation from the Central star. Henry Throop Department of Space Studies Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) Boulder, Colorado John Bally University of Colorado DPS Pasadena, October 2006. Photoevaporation from Central Star.

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Gap formation in Young Circumstellar Disks due to Photoevaporation from the Central star

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  1. Gap formation in Young Circumstellar Disks due to Photoevaporation from the Central star Henry Throop Department of Space Studies Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) Boulder, Colorado John Bally University of Colorado DPS Pasadena, October 2006

  2. Photoevaporation from Central Star • Historically thought unimportant due to low UV flux from central star and poor line-of-sight geometry. • Hollenbach et al (1994) revived idea with indirect flux reflected off disk’s corona. • Matsuyama et al (2003) found that PE would create gap, but only after disk is depleted by 10 Myr+ of viscous evolution. • Alexander et al (2005, 2006) STIS measurements found photospheric UV flux from young solar-mass stars. Showed PE could make gaps, using direct illumination in flared disks. • We add dust transport to latest PE model.

  3. Dust settles to midplane rapidly -- cm sizes in 105 yr

  4. Photoevaporation: UV flux heats gas to 1500K, heating and dissociating H2 and allowing it to leave disk via Jeans escape ddt ~ R-5/2, for R > RG ddt = 0, for R < RG Gravitational radius RG ~ 2 AU RG ~ 2 AU RG RG

  5. Photoevaporation creates gap outward of RG • Gas is removed but dust is retained • Dust is at midplane and inaccessible to PE • Dust has grown large enough to be retained RG RG

  6. Viscous evolution fills in gap with new dust, gas RG RG

  7. Process continues: Gas is removed and dust is transported inward RG RG

  8. Final state: Gas depleted in gap Dust enhanced in gap Dust:Gas ratio D/G increased to point that gravitational instability can rapidly form planetesimals (Skkiya 1997; Youdin & Shu 2002) RG RG

  9. Disk Model • Disk • MMSN disk surrounding solar-mass star • Flared disk • Viscous evolution,  = 0.01 (e.g., Pringle 1981) • Photoevaporation • Central star flux 1041 ionizing photons/sec • Alexander et al 2005; Hollenbach et al 1994. • Dust Transport • Dust settles to midplane rapidly (< Myr) • Dust grains are radially transported viscously • Radial transport stops when gas is depleted • Dust:gas ratio 1:100

  10. Photoevaporation Off

  11. Photoevaporation On Photoevaporation On

  12. Photoevaporation On Photoevaporation On GI unstable region

  13. Conclusions and Implications • Gas disk in region ~2-10 AU is depleted on Myr timescales • Faster than viscous timescales, but compatible with observations of disk lifetimes • Gap formation will be slower for disks > 1 MMSN • Dust, planetesimals concentrated at gap • Planetesimals can be formed via GI, if not formed already • May speed formation of gas giant cores, but limits envelope accretion timescales • In dense clusters (OB associations), effects of PE are additive! • External star: Removes disk from outside in (Johnstone et al 1998; Throop & Bally 2005) • Central star: Removes disks from inside out

  14. Planetesimal Formation • Two methods: • Sticking • Gravitational Instability

  15. Photo-Evaporation Triggered Instability • Gravitational collapse of dust in disk can occur if sufficiently low gas:dust ratio (Sekiya 1997; Youdin & Shu 2004) • g /d < 10 • (I.e., reduction by 10x of original gas mass) • PE removes gas and leaves most dust • Grain growth and settling promote this further • Dust disk collapse provides a rapid path to planetesimal formation, without requiring particle sticking. Throop & Bally 2005

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