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Published May 1, 2004 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Planet-Disk Symbiosis

Abstract

Planets form in disks around young stars. Interactions with these disks cause them to migrate and thus affect their final orbital periods. We suggest that the connection between planets and disks may be deeper and involve a symbiotic evolution. By contributing to the outward transport of angular momentum, planets promote disk accretion. Here we demonstrate that planets sufficiently massive to open gaps could be the primary agents driving disk accretion. Those having masses below the gap opening threshold drift inward more rapidly than the disk material and can only play a minor role in its accretion. An even more intimate symbiosis involving gap opening planets may result if they acquire most of their mass prior to gap formation. Given a small initial eccentricity, just a fraction of a percent, the orbital eccentricity of a massive planet may grow rapidly once a mass in excess of the planet's mass has been repelled to form a gap around the planet's orbit. Then, as the planet's radial excursions approach the gap's width, subsequent eccentricity growth slows so that the planet's orbit continues to be confined within the gap.

Additional Information

© 2004 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2003 July 5; accepted 2004 March 18; published 2004 April 5. This research was supported in part by an NSF grant AST 00-98301 and NASA grant NAG5-12037. We thank the referee, Roman Rafikov, for comments that tightened the logic of our presentation.

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Published - 1538-4357_606_1_L77.pdf

Submitted - 0307107v1.pdf

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