The growth of super-Earths: the importance of a self-consistent treatment of disc structures and pebble accretion (2103.11995v1)
Abstract: The conditions in the protoplanetary disc are determinant for the various planet formation mechanisms. We present a framework which combines self-consistent disc structures with the calculations of the growth rates of planetary embryos via pebble accretion, in order to study the formation of Super-Earths. We first perform 2D hydrodynamical simulations of the inner discs, considering a grain size distribution with multiple chemical species and their corresponding size and composition dependent opacities. The resulting aspect ratios are almost constant with orbital distance, resulting in radially constant pebble isolation masses, the mass where pebble accretion stops. This supports the "peas-in-a-pod" constraint from the Kepler observations. The derived pebble sizes are used to calculate the growth rates of planetary embryos via pebble accretion. Discs with low levels of turbulence (expressed through the $\alpha$-viscosity) and/or high dust fragmentation velocities allow larger particles, hence lead to smaller pebble isolation masses, and the contrary. At the same time, small pebble sizes lead to low accretion rates. We find that there is a trade-off between the pebble isolation mass and the growth timescale with the best set of parameters being an $\alpha$-viscosity of $10{-3}$ and a dust fragmentation velocity of 10 m/s, mainly for an initial gas surface density (at 1 AU) greater than 1000 $\rm{g/cm2}$. A self-consistent treatment between the disc structures and the pebble sizes is thus of crucial importance for planet formation simulations.
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