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2018ApJ...856...41R - Astrophys. J., 856, 41-41 (2018/March-3)

The interplay between radiation pressure and the photoelectric instability in optically thin disks of gas and dust.

RICHERT A.J.W., LYRA W. and KUCHNER M.J.

Abstract (from CDS):

In optically thin disks, dust grains are photoelectrically stripped of electrons by starlight, heating nearby gas and possibly creating a dust clumping instability-the photoelectric instability (PeI)-that significantly alters global disk structure. In the current work, we use the Pencil Code to perform the first numerical models of the PeI that include stellar radiation pressure on dust grains in order to explore the parameter regime in which the instability operates. In some models with low gas and dust surface densities, we see a variety of dust structures, including sharp concentric rings. In the most gas- and dust-rich models, nonaxisymmetric clumps, arcs, and spiral arms emerge that represent dust surface density enhancements of factors of ∼5-20. In one high gas surface density model, we include a large, low-order gas viscosity and find that it observably smooths the structures that form in the gas and dust, suggesting that resolved images of a given disk may be useful for deriving constraints on the effective viscosity of its gas. Our models show that radiation pressure does not preclude the formation of complex structure from the PeI, but the qualitative manifestation of the PeI depends strongly on the parameters of the system. The PeI may provide an explanation for unusual disk morphologies, such as the moving blobs of the AU Mic disk, the asymmetric dust distribution of the 49 Ceti disk, and the rings and arcs found in the HD 141569A disk.

Abstract Copyright: © 2018. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): hydrodynamics - instabilities - methods: numerical - radiation: dynamics - zodiacal dust

Simbad objects: 7

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