Gravitational instability in two-phase disks and the origin of the moon
- Creators
- Thompson, Christopher
-
Stevenson, David J.
Abstract
Two-phase disks may be gravitationally unstable at temperatures or surface densities at which a disk composed of either single phase would be highly stable. It is argued that two-phase disks can achieve a marginally unstable state (in addition to a highly unstable state that leads to fragmentation), limited by the ability of the photosphere to radiate the energy dissipated in the disk. A self-consistent prescription for the viscosity induced by the slow instabilities is provided. Two-phase disks are more centrally condensed than single-phase disks, and their secular cooling time may be comparable to their spreading time. A circumterrestrial disk of sufficient mass to form the moon provides a detailed example of all the preceding points. Its stability, structure, and dynamical evolution are investigated, and it is concluded that its spreading time is short (about ~100 yr); the moon is formed molten, or partially molten; the moon's initial orbit lies in the earth's equatorial plane; and only a small fraction of the disk mass is lost in a wind, although this may represent a substantial fraction of volatiles. Most of these conclusions are independent of how the disk was formed, e.g., from a giant impact.
Additional Information
© 1988 The American Astronomical Society. Received 1986 August 28; accepted 1988 March 22. We acknowledge conversations with P. Goldreich and W. Ward. This work was initiated while C. T. held a Caltech Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship; we are grateful to the SURF program for its support. D. J. S. acknowledges support from NASA grant NAGW 185.Attached Files
Published - 1988ApJ___333__452T.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 39035
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20130621-152608690
- NASA
- NAGW-185
- Caltech Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF)
- Created
-
2013-06-21Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-09Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS)